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<blockquote data-quote="Immacomputer" data-source="post: 4904222" data-attributes="member: 570419"><p>Logically applies? Are you familiar with digital and analog systems? I am and it is VERY logical.</p><p></p><p>I understand that our feelings are different but I also know by experience that I cannot tell the difference in perception from a 15hz signal and a 35hz signal. I detect both and I know they come from different analog receptors but my brain still perceives the 15hz signal as an audio signal and not as a feeling. It's the same idea of getting a "taste" from smelling something. You're getting the primary signal from your nose but your tongue takes up small samples itself (samples small enough that it normally would not detect them) and then you can perceive the smell as a taste. The same thing happens here; your hearing rolls off somewhere in the 20s and but your ear can still pick up small samples. The main trigger is going to come from the vibrations felt. The brain can process this and discern the signals are similar and thus were heard and felt. It's all about getting the right signal to noise ratio for your senses to work.</p><p></p><p>My brain tells me I'm hearing an audible signal below 20hz and that's based on the vibrations and minute signal from my ears.</p><p></p><p>My brain tells me whether I hear, feel, or smell something and I know the difference. My brain tells me that I can hear a signal. How it is taken in is completely irrelevant because the end result is my brain firing saying that I have heard a very low frequency signal.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Immacomputer, post: 4904222, member: 570419"] Logically applies? Are you familiar with digital and analog systems? I am and it is VERY logical. I understand that our feelings are different but I also know by experience that I cannot tell the difference in perception from a 15hz signal and a 35hz signal. I detect both and I know they come from different analog receptors but my brain still perceives the 15hz signal as an audio signal and not as a feeling. It's the same idea of getting a "taste" from smelling something. You're getting the primary signal from your nose but your tongue takes up small samples itself (samples small enough that it normally would not detect them) and then you can perceive the smell as a taste. The same thing happens here; your hearing rolls off somewhere in the 20s and but your ear can still pick up small samples. The main trigger is going to come from the vibrations felt. The brain can process this and discern the signals are similar and thus were heard and felt. It's all about getting the right signal to noise ratio for your senses to work. My brain tells me I'm hearing an audible signal below 20hz and that's based on the vibrations and minute signal from my ears. My brain tells me whether I hear, feel, or smell something and I know the difference. My brain tells me that I can hear a signal. How it is taken in is completely irrelevant because the end result is my brain firing saying that I have heard a very low frequency signal. [/QUOTE]
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