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| ==Q3. How does an instrument through which sound is transmitted shape our expectation and the perception of it (loudspeaker, telephone, alarm-clock), in other words, what if the expectation is not met, what impact can this have on our perception?== | ==Q3. How does an instrument through which sound is transmitted shape our expectation and the perception of it (loudspeaker, telephone, alarm-clock), in other words, what if the expectation is not met, what impact can this have on our perception?== | ||
| Depending on the medium, we have different expectations concerning time and space: When you hear sounds through a telephone, you expect them to happen all at another place, but at the same time. When you hear sounds through a loudspeaker, you expect them to be recorded at another place at another time (if you don't see a sound source). This changes our perception: we have more distance to it, as a reproduced sound can be reproduced again and doesn't provoke a physical reaction. This is based on experience: The first cinema audience panicked seeing a [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1dgLEDdFddk train arriving]. | |||
| ==Videos== | ==Videos== | ||
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