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TopicAre you over or under 50 years old? Yanny vs Laurel
botsrule
05/19/18 10:52:19 AM
#1:


Choose your age range and which word you heard. - Results (5 votes)
I'm over 50 and heard Yanny.
0% (0 votes)
0
I'm over 50 and heard Laurel.
0% (0 votes)
0
I'm under 50 and heard Yanny.
60% (3 votes)
3
I'm under 50 and heard Laurel.
40% (2 votes)
2
Why is this happening?
Multiple factors explain why some people hear Yanny and other people hear Laurel most of which can be explained with a little science and physics.

The first thing to understand is that the Reddit audio was low-quality. Experts said that can lead to some ambiguity about what people actually hear.

"I would guess that because of the poor recording quality, the sound ended up being on a perceptual border," said Todd Ricketts, vice chair of graduate studies with the department of hearing and speech sciences at Vanderbilt University Medical Center.

In other words, the audio is so crummy that it straddles the line between one sound and another.

But the main explanation comes down to frequency and the device you are using to play the audio.

Different playback systems can change the frequency of the audio being played. For example, phones, computers and headphones often filter out low frequencies, while larger speakers like subwoofers can handle them better.

This is important, because the acoustics for "Yanny" is heard at a higher frequency than the acoustic information that makes someone hear "Laurel."

In other words, you are more likely to hear "Laurel" on higher quality devices because it is better at handling the low frequency.

"With a full range higher quality speaker I clearly only hear Laurel, but over my computer speakers I clearly only hear Yanny, " Ricketts said.

What does hearing either word say about my hearing?
Because this phenomenon has a lot to do with frequency, experts said the age of the listener can affect what a person hears, too.

Around the age of 50, a lot of people have begin losing their high-frequency hearing, which is why experts believe older people would be more likely to hear "Laurel," and vice versa.

"If you were to compare a group of young people to a group of old people listening to this clip on the same device, its more likely that the older people will hear Laurel, " said Barbara Shinn-Cunningham, a professor, and expert on the neuroscience of hearing.
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