On Nov 8, 6:00�pm, HardySpicer <gyansor...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Nov 8, 1:43�am, "Robert Rozman" <roz...@fri.uni-lj.si> wrote:
>
> > Hi,
>
> > I'd kindly for pointers if such binaural recordings are available to public
> > somewhere ?
>
> > I'd love to have recordings from two microphones (spaced from each other)
> > and several different positions of sound source...
>
> > I'd use it for lab exercises...
>
> > Thanks in advance,
>
> > regards,
>
> > Rob.
>
> Maybe, but if you use anechoic recordings it glosses over the real
> problems of reverberation. You would need to do anechoic and in a real
> environment.
>
> Hardy
thread crossposted to rec.audio.pro
Mark
Reply by HardySpicer●November 8, 20082008-11-08
On Nov 8, 1:43�am, "Robert Rozman" <roz...@fri.uni-lj.si> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'd kindly for pointers if such binaural recordings are available to public
> somewhere ?
>
> I'd love to have recordings from two microphones (spaced from each other)
> and several different positions of sound source...
>
> I'd use it for lab exercises...
>
> Thanks in advance,
>
> regards,
>
> Rob.
Maybe, but if you use anechoic recordings it glosses over the real
problems of reverberation. You would need to do anechoic and in a real
environment.
Hardy
Reply by Glen Herrmannsfeldt●November 7, 20082008-11-07
Robert Rozman wrote:
> I'd kindly for pointers if such binaural recordings
> are available to public somewhere ?
I have heard the term 'binaural recording' used to describe
two microphones inside a fake head such that they record the
sound that your two ears might hear. When listened to through
headphones it is supposed to make a very realistic reproduction.
-- glen
Reply by Rune Allnor●November 7, 20082008-11-07
On 7 Nov, 13:43, "Robert Rozman" <roz...@fri.uni-lj.si> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'd kindly for pointers if such binaural recordings are available to public
> somewhere ?
>
> I'd love to have recordings from two microphones (spaced from each other)
> and several different positions of sound source...
>
> I'd use it for lab exercises...
These kinds of recordings are routinely done in acoustics
labs, usually in anechoic chambers. Anechoic chambers may
be few and far between, but you might be lucky - check with
your local university if they have one you can use.
Rune
Reply by DigitalSignal●November 7, 20082008-11-07
Hi Rob,
For portable use, take a look at the CoCo-80. It records up to 8
channels simultaneously up to 102.kHz. (www.go-ci.com)
For non-portable use, look at many kinds of PC-based dynamic data
acqusition systems such as: www.lds-group.com, www.ni.com
James
www.go-ci.com
Reply by Robert Rozman●November 7, 20082008-11-07
Hi,
I'd kindly for pointers if such binaural recordings are available to public
somewhere ?
I'd love to have recordings from two microphones (spaced from each other)
and several different positions of sound source...
I'd use it for lab exercises...
Thanks in advance,
regards,
Rob.