Quote:
Originally Posted by joeq On the other hand, if you were performing a Null Test instead of a mix, your null would be totally broken - your test utterly ruined.
This speaks to the sensitivity of the null test itself. Not the audibility of one tick of the pan knob. |
There is just one situation where i would disagree.
In the case that you realy get NULL from the null test...
Then there realy is no difference between the subjects being tested and the null test would be meaningfull.
Hence the name of the test.
You test for the NULL condition.
Candidates either pass or fail the test.
No other conclusions should be drawn from this test directly besides deciding if there is a difference or not.