Please no Stevie Wonder jokes etc.
I'm mostly interested if anyone can recall listening tests where people are placed in a room, perhaps blind folded or seated behind a screen where they can't see the speakers or performers on the stage, or perhaps they're simply seated facing away from the performance.
The audio engineer (or tester) then plays recordings and possibly even further manipulates the sound being produced by the speakers to create a most life like sound. For example: keys being jingled, a conversation between people, singing, a violin being played, a piano, drums, then more complex sounds all played or performed simultaneously. Were listeners able to tell the recordings/sound processing vs when people performed the same task? What speakers were used and what year was the test carried out? I realize their are tons of pit falls to these tests? Namely, if a speaker is promoted then of course the results have to be taken with a grain of salt until it can be proven the audio engineer was also blind to the speakers that would next be played. That's fairly impossible if he's also using studio effects. He'd then have to know how the effects would be played on each speaker. In a way, I'd almost like if no speaker brands are mentioned. At least then I'd know the study was for some audio study and not a promotional piece by a speaker company.
How do self avowed audiophiles perceive sound vs the general public vs actual experts? Can anyone recall the statistics. I'm guessing most people don't know what they like or how to discern particular sounds. I wouldn't be shocked at all if people's answers to follow up questions on which sound they like better differed from their perceptions of which they'd like better. The common theme among people is that they love the sound of live instruments being played over a recording, but that they also like studio mastered reproductions of their favorite bands because the live albums always have timing and vocal problems. That seems reasonable to me. But who knows, given the right speaker system maybe I too could learn to hate a live performance at a symphony. haha
I'm also curious about any other tests. I'm aware of the equal loudness frequency detectability curve. Granted this resulted from a blind test of sorts because the people were not told which frequencies were playing (as far as I know), but that's not the crucial aspect of the test. We learned how humans ears perceive sound and the results might not have been dramatically affected by knowing which frequencies were playing.
I curious to know how actual humans perceive sounds and/or the findings related to sound recreation.
Please don't think I'm trying to find the ultimate speaker test or recommendation. I want to understand how humans actually hear. And if a few speaker brands are mentioned, then so be it.
Any and all entertaining anecdotes from audio tests concerning test subjects would be greatly appreciated.