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On Aug 30, 11:45 am, D Peter Maus wrote:
Roadie wrote: Visual information hasn't ever been transmitted or received by radio. Radios transmit information in audio form that is heard by a listener and interpreted. Televisions transmit both visual and audio information that is seen and heard simultaneously the viewer and interpreted. You appear to be mixing up the concepts of broadcast audio and visual information. The pure listener may conjure up an image of what could be going on, but the success or failure of that imagery is dependent entirely on the ability of the reader at the radio station to accurately convey audio information about the scene. Visual information has always been transmitted and received by radio. Even before the pictures. Actually, there is an entire division of audio sciences dedicated to the study of visual images created by audio only. Interpretation is a part of that, true. But not as much as you may imagine. Do some reading. Even Harry Olson addresses this as far back as the 40's. And studies have shown that there are visual cues in audio information that are astonishingly common to the bulk of listeners. Simple phase relationships in stereo will create images in listeners minds, that when sketched by different individuals, in separate locations in the stereo field, even in different locations of test, the images drawn resemble each other. All of which is getting deeper into this matter than is necessary for the point...and that point is that aural input creates visual information. The eyes are not necessary to see the pictures. The National Federation of the Blind has been carrying this evangel for decades. And in all but a handful of TV shows over the last 60 years, only the audio was necessary to create the full measure of the experience of a show in the listener. Radio dramas written for radio contain the same audible visual cues as drama written for TV. Listen carefully to the dialog. There's a great deal of verbal exposition, even, if not especially, in shows like CSI. And surveys support that respondents get the same level of detail and understanding by listening to the audio only that they do watching video with audio. The writing is still the same as it was in the days of Inner Sanctum and the Shadow. The production still uses the same effects. Consider the number of blind people that 'watch' TV regularly. Jose Feliciano went into exquisite detail on Letterman some years ago about this. Try this: Next time you're watching CSI, turn the audio up, go into the next room and begin a hobby. Build a model. Repair a radio. You'll see everything on the screen. Except you'll see it in your mind's eye, where the images are dramatically clearer and always exactly what you expect them to be. It will take some practice, and it will take a while, but you'll get it. Just as generations of radio listeners did before you.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Visual images are not in any way transmitted by radio. Only audio information is transmitted by radio. That audio information is interpreted by our brain and sometimes, if the radio broadcaster is successful in his description and we are alert some of that audio information is translated into visual images within our mind. But no visual images are transmitted by radio. The mental translation of audio information into visual images can have results that are much less precise than a broadcast picture. Nonethless audio only broadcasts can certainly be entertaining. |
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