Voici la copie ici de 2 intéressantes interventions qui éclairent les contours de fonctionnement de la correction acoustique MultEQ XT(32). Ceci plus particulièrement du point de vue des raisons et objectifs des résultats auditifs recherchés > 1kHz et pour une zone d'écoute.
Maintenant si on lit entre les lignes, on peut percevoir ici, tout l'intérêt potentiel du Kit Audyssey Pro (tolérance micro +/- 0 .5dB), ceci en termes de précision de l'image audio finalement possible après cette calibration Pro.

sur AVS, Audyssey a écrit:Originally Posted by markus767 qui a écrit:Let's put it this way, what causes "an excessively bright tonal balance"?
Hi Markus,
One reason could be taking measurements too far off axis. The tweeter listening window response may be such that off axis measurements tell MultEQ that there is not "enough" high frequency content and that can result in unnecessary boost. Hence, the recommendation to keep the measurements within the opening angle of two front speakers.
There is evidence in the literature that points to a reason to apply correction at frequencies above Schröder. It is the BBC research that showed that stereo imaging is critically dependent on having matched speaker responses (±1 dB) well above 1 kHz. That's nearly impossible to achieve just by buying two "identical" speakers since it is outside the manufacturing tolerance of most mass-produced components. So, even if you don't believe that room correction is needed you may want to consider the correction beneficial if it ends up providing a better speaker-to-speaker match in the high frequency range.
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Chris
sur AVS, Audyssey a écrit:Originally Posted by markus767 qui a écrit:I agree that matching speakers is a very important goal. Is that all Audyssey is trying to correct for at higher frequencies?
This sounds like a trick question . In the frequency domain, it is trying to get each speaker to match the target curve. The result is that each speaker is also better matched to each other. In the time domain, it is trying to clean up the impulse response so that the contributions of the acoustical environment (room, nearby surfaces, etc.) are minimized. For example, a speaker close to a large TV screen will produce reflections from that screen that will combine with the direct sound and create time domain related problems above 3-5 kHz. Shouldn't those be "corrected"? We believe that they should.
Also, in response to an earlier comment you made about averaging. Frequency domain averaging has been tried and it can improve things greatly over single position measurements (assuming it is done correctly, i.e. in the RMS sense). But, it still has a problem: all measurements are equally weighted when, in fact, the acoustical problems are not equally distributed. To avoid this problem, we developed a different method to combine the measurements that is not based on traditional averaging. I would be happy to send you some published papers on the C-means fuzzy clustering technique that we use.
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Chris
Hugo
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PS': édition tolérance micro Audyssey Pro +/- 0.5dB