MDS said:
I don't see how the test will do anything either and just for the record, a 'good' adc/dac will have jitter measured in picoseconds (trillionths of a second). Ain't no way the human ear can detect a timing error of 30 trillionths of a second.
A few years ago I was looking for research data to see if anyone has measured the minimum threshold where a human could detect a difference in sound. I never did find any publicly available (mtrycrafts, WmAx any pointers?) I did have a few discussions with some of the recording engineers on the Sound Forge forums and none of them had any definitive references for me, but most thought it was around 6 ms.
The reason I was (am) interested in any studies is that I was attempting to determine just how many samples in a row at the maximum value (the definition of 'clipping' for digital audio) it takes to be audible on general music. Sound Forge uses a simple 'over' counter, which happens to be set at 4. So 4 consecutive max value samples will light the clip indicators but on every CD I have ripped that lights the clip indicators, said clipping is entirely inaudible to me.
Are you looking for thresholds in reference to time, how long something has to be played to be detected?
There are a number for amplitude, jutter and distortion:
"Theoretical and Audible Effects of Jitter on Digital Audio Quality", Benjamin, Eric and Gannon, Benjamin, 105th AES Convention, 1998, Print 4826.
"Clock Jitter, D/A Converters and Sample Rate Convertions", Adams, Robert W., 95th AES Convention, Print #3712.
"Theory and VLSI Implementation of Asynchronous Sample Rate Converters", Adams, R. A. & Kwan, T., 94th AES Convention, 1993, Print #3570.
"Level Discrimination as a Function of Level for Tones from .25 to 16khz", Florentine, Mary, et al, Journal of Acoustic Society of America, 81(5) May 1987, pg 1528-1541.
"On the Relations of Intensity JND's to Loudness and Neural Noise", Zwislocki, J and Jordan H., Journal of Acoustics Society of America, 79(3), Mar 86, pg 772-780.
"Auditory Intensity Discrimination at High Frequencies in the Presence of Noise", Viemeister, Neal F., Science, vol 220, 16 Sep 83, pg 1206-1208.
"Speaker Cables, Measurements vs Psychoacoustic Data", Villchur, Edgar, Audio, Jul 94, pg 34-37.
And Moir has one on distortion, I need to look for it in my library