Bruce,
I think one should at least carefully read an article before stoning it in the arena. I do not have the expertise to comment on the article under consideration, nor the time to read with with the care to take position on it, but could read in TAS:
All listening tests were conducted under strict single-blind conditions.
Upon occasion, double-blind testing was also employed where
practical. When appropriate, listening levels were matched to +/-
0.1dB. For most tests, this was unnecessary and redundant since
common digital files yielded identical playback volumes. We wish
to make one final comment about how we arranged our listening
tests when only the two of us were evaluating differences. In
conducting single-blind trials, one person would do the switching
while the primary listener would sit without moving, with eyes
closed, and with no talking allowed to eliminate any potentially
distracting sensory stimuli which could disturb our concentration
and long-term memory (musical excerpts lasted anywhere from
30 seconds to 5 minutes depending on the content of the test
track). This was essential when trying to make extremely subtle
quantitative judgments. The A/B comparison was then repeated
with our roles reversed. Only after we agreed that we had come
to a conclusion did we discuss between us what we had heard.