If I invert one ear's signal relative to the other in headphones I get the well-known 'Whooah..!' effect where mono sound goes 'stereo' (kind of), accompanied by a sensation of head-spinning nauseousness. I just tried it for about a minute using Audacity to invert one half of a mono track duplicated to stereo and I still seem to be suffering from the effects 10 minutes later..!
Clearly, (and I've only just thought of this) if other people also experience this, it proves that hearing is not just a phase-free Fourier Transform analyser as claimed by many people, because otherwise it would not be able to distinguish between inverted and non-inverted conditions when listening with headphones (where there is no acoustic comb filtering/cancellation). Instead, sound is correlated in some other way that is discombobulated by inverted polarity.
The effect also happens with stereo speakers wired in anti-phase - quite strongly I would say. But... I went to an audio show a few months ago where an expert was talking to the audience about speakers he had re-built, and joked that he had had a 'Golden-Ears' in that morning who had spotted that he had wired one of the speakers backwards. So it seems that such a strongly-negative sensation for some people might not be a problem for others.
Is this happening with dipole speakers and their inverted reflections that reach the listener's ears via different paths? Some people (me) find them at some level nausea-inducing, but maybe others hear only a widening of the stereo, or a funky surround sound effect.
Clearly, (and I've only just thought of this) if other people also experience this, it proves that hearing is not just a phase-free Fourier Transform analyser as claimed by many people, because otherwise it would not be able to distinguish between inverted and non-inverted conditions when listening with headphones (where there is no acoustic comb filtering/cancellation). Instead, sound is correlated in some other way that is discombobulated by inverted polarity.
The effect also happens with stereo speakers wired in anti-phase - quite strongly I would say. But... I went to an audio show a few months ago where an expert was talking to the audience about speakers he had re-built, and joked that he had had a 'Golden-Ears' in that morning who had spotted that he had wired one of the speakers backwards. So it seems that such a strongly-negative sensation for some people might not be a problem for others.
Is this happening with dipole speakers and their inverted reflections that reach the listener's ears via different paths? Some people (me) find them at some level nausea-inducing, but maybe others hear only a widening of the stereo, or a funky surround sound effect.