AAU Student Projects - visit Aalborg University's student projects portal
A master's thesis from Aalborg University
Book cover


The Role of Compression in the Subjective Evaluation of Music Quality

Authors

;

Term

4. term

Publication year

2014

Submitted on

Pages

82

Abstract

Denne afhandling undersøger, hvordan dynamikkompression påvirker den subjektive vurdering af musik, med udgangspunkt i den såkaldte loudness-krig. Formålet er at isolere kompressionens betydning for oplevet kvalitet ved at fjerne lydstyrke som forstyrrende faktor. Til dette formål gennemføres et lytteforsøg med musikuddrag fra fire genrer, hvor hver passage forekommer i tre kompressionsgrader: ubehandlet samt komprimeret med tærskler ved -12 dBFS og -24 dBFS; alle andre kompressorparametre holdes faste. Programloudness anvendes til at normalisere lydstyrken på tværs af versioner, så forskelle i oplevet lydstyrke ikke påvirker bedømmelserne. Deltagerne vurderer fire perceptuelle attributter for hvert uddrag. Resultaterne viser, at lytterne generelt har svært ved at skelne mellem kompressionsgraderne, og at de hørbare ledetråde til kompression i høj grad relaterer sig til lydstyrkeforskelle, som blev elimineret af normaliseringen. Studiet adresserer alene lydkvalitet og afgrænser træthedseffekter til fremtidigt arbejde.

This thesis examines how dynamic range compression affects the subjective evaluation of music quality in the context of the loudness war. The aim is to isolate the effect of compression on perceived quality by removing loudness as a confounding factor. A listening test was conducted using music excerpts from four genres, each presented in three compression conditions: unprocessed, and compressed with thresholds at -12 dBFS and -24 dBFS, with all other compressor parameters held constant. Program loudness was used to normalize the level across versions so that differences in perceived loudness would not bias judgments. Participants rated four perceptual attributes for each excerpt. Results indicate that listeners generally struggled to distinguish among the compression degrees, and that audible cues to compression were largely tied to loudness differences, which were removed by normalization. The study focuses on perceived quality and leaves listening fatigue for future work.

[This summary has been generated with the help of AI directly from the project (PDF)]