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John,I agree with Josh - this is irrelevant and has nothing to do with the ability of "science" to assess the accuracy of audio equipment. And that is the real issue, where golden ears proclaim they can hear subtle nuances that science doesn't yet know how to measure. ...
What you are describing is human perception of melody and instrument timbre and stereo placement etc. Localization cues are highly dependent on reflections captured by the microphones, but that has nothing to do with whether ears are better than test gear. Ears vary all over the place, even from one instant to the next, making them a very poor judge of audio quality. Or put another way, when a recording sounds different today than it did yesterday it's your ears/brain that changed, not "cable break-in" or a solid state amp "warming up" or the application of a green felt marker, or any of the dozens of other audiophile theories that defy all that is known by real scientists. ...
I simply find it interesting that some have stated if it can be "heard", it can be measured, as if a measurement can tell us what we are hearing.
That doesn't mean that a computer couldn't be taught to determine what an oboe sounds like and to pick it out from other instruments.