No concern about commercial conflict of interest as Dr. Toole addresses these other performance vectors in his 1986 JAES paper when he worked for NRC. Unfortunately papers that old are scanned archives which means I literally have to type all of them in to quote, or take screen snapshots. Here is a short summary of it as a snapshot:I agree, I just think it was a well written opinion on the subject. Personally, I'm all for both measurements and subjective listening and I think anything that can be done to further the correlation of measurements to how we perceive sound is a step in the right direction. Amir has made some irrefutable points imo, but it's also true that as complex as the subject is, it's still nowhere near complex enough to completely define how sound is perceived. It would be interesting to see if Harman has managed to measure more obscure things like detail or resolution of a speaker, speed or PRAT, cohesiveness, etc... we know they won't share information if they think withholding it would be a competitive advantage so it's hard to know exactly how much progress has been made in this area.
The text leading up to this says while the other characteristics are complex and important, they routinely follow along with proper behavior in frequency domain. I still remember the first time I reduced a peak in bass frequencies and all of a sudden, I could hear so much more detail in higher frequencies. The resonance in time was smearing the other details, especially since bass is so powerful relative to mid and high frequencies. This is totally non-intuitive but anyone who has experimented with EQ knows it 100%. So the first job is to produce a loudspeaker that has well behaved frequency response. Once there, yes, as I indicated in my earlier post, there are other characteristics that you want to detect by auditioning. What you don't want to do is jump into those without dealing with the major factor involved.
As I have noted, loudspeakers that have proper characteristics in frequency domain, also are room friendly. The reflections are similar to the direct sound so having them there or not makes far less difference than loudspeakers that have large differences as many do. So that is another reason to look at frequency response measurements.
I think beyond the reviewer writing something for us, they need to educate themselves. They need to be familiar with all of this research. Perform their own measurements and try to correlate them to what they hear. They need to become trained listeners. Only then will they be in a superior position to us as readers to convey information that can be taken as authoritative and informative. To the extent they are a peer reviewer to the rest of us, they have substantially lowered the bar for what a reviewer is supposed to be, and do.I also think there's room in the world for both subjective reviews as well as measurements. I'd agree most people don't care and aren't trained to understand measurements, but some are and some people obviously find them valuable. If you are a reviewer trying to reach the broadest possible audience a review that covered both areas thoughtfully and thoroughly would probably be the best way to go,