They cause us to perceive the world in different ways than we are used to and even question our judgment on what seemingly straightforward things represent. Sensory illusions are interesting concepts. Posted by AcousticalSurfaces on 9:50 am | Leave a Comment So I am at a loss - I presume it is a vitamin defficiency, so I just bout some multi-Vs this week.Hearing and Believing – The Most Interesting Auditory Illusions The morbid thought in my head is that this may be associated with sleep apnia and my body twitching back 'alaive' after stopping breathing however - this happens when I am not even fully asleep. I'll basically hit 'asleep' and Ill have a flash in my internal vision (white light looking like an iris of an eye is best way to say it) - and a full body twitch, it jolts me back awake. So I thought that it was caused by the creaks hitting my ears at time of turning asleep - but it happens when even I am not fully asleep.īut the body twitches really freak me out. I equated it to what I had read a long time ago that "in order for one to fall asleep the body shuts down the sensory systems, and the last one to turn off prior to sleep is hearing" This literally usally happens right on the cusp of falling asleep. its too dim to make out.ĪLSO - eveyone should checkout its not a radio station its just a really really faint sound of music playing - like jazz or something. Listen to the resonant sweep that seems to be in the background, it's a phaser on the guitar.ĮDIT: I said "radio station" only because thats what most would recognize. Here's a video of someone replicating that phaser fx tone very well. Descending again at 3:00 to 3:03 and etc. You can hear from 2:52 to 2:55 it's descending and from 2:56 to 2:59 it's rising. There is no shephard tone running in the background, that's a phaser effect running over an otherwise plain pad playing chords. It does not include the center sound though. This article has a decent recreation of the left and right synths in Aerodynamic. I don't think it's octave effect, but it produces a similar result and all 3 synths seem to occupy their own separate frequency space while also sounding like one unit. There's also a 3rd more "nasal" synth voice in the center which is playing the same pattern with the high/low notes inverted except for the quicker 4 note run that happens on the 4th count of every bar, where it synchronizes again. I'm pretty sure the blog author is referring to 2 hard panned synths, the sort of plucky one in the right and more smooth one on the left. Could the illusion just be hearing damage? And then handedness just follows which ear takes more damage due to more noisy things happening / less protection on that side? That could also explain why left-handed people are less strongly sided, as they're forced to do things more balanced due to right-hand-only stuff existing. Maybe worth mentioning: I've had a hearing test in the past year and I'm essentially completely balanced, so there likely isn't a tone-deafness issue on one side that could cause a reception imbalance. ![]() The high tone clearly moves between sides. I'm definitely hearing "low" while hearing "high" on the opposite ear, though it feels like there's a basically constant central "low" as well. The others warble around for me, though I'm pretty strongly right handed.Įven after reading and listening to I'm totally lost as to what this post or wikipedia are describing. ![]() One seems like higher is more in my left, but it clearly follows the left speaker on my headphones. There are a couple overlapping high/low pairs in that segment, and I'm not sure which is the octave/those frequencies. ![]() Tbh I'm not sure which notes they're referring to here. I hear the higher pitch on my right and the lower one on my left ear. Open the song Aerodynamic and fast-forward to 2:28, start listening to the passage.
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