posted on 2010-01-01, 00:00authored byWilliam D. Haines, Jesse R. Vernon, Roger B. Dannenberg, Peter F. Driessen
Reverberation can be simulated by convolving dry instrument signals with physically
measured impulse response data. Such reverberation effects have recently become commonplace;
however, current techniques apply a single effect to an entire ensemble, and then
separate individual instruments in the stereo field via panning. By measuring impulse response
data from each desired instrument location, it is possible to place instruments in the stereo field
using their unique early reflection and reverberation patterns without panning. A pilot study
compares the perceived quality of dry signals convolved to stereo center, convolved to stereo
center and panned to desired placement, and convolved with measured impulse responses to
simulate placement. The results of a single blind study show a preference for location-based
(as opposed to panning-based) reverberation effects.