Science Brief: Does Buying Expensive Headphones Guarantee You Better Sound Quality?

in #science7 years ago (edited)

So when you are looking around for a good pair of headphones, you usually look at the prices of the sets and read reviews right? It's really easy to think "well I will look for something with good reviews, then rank quality a bit based on the cost." The more expensive sets with good reviews must be better then the cheap ones right?

Some intrepid scientists decided to take a look into this, through measuring the frequency response of various headphones. The results of their work were recently published in The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America in an article titled "No correlation between headphone frequency response and retail price."

From the title, you can already answer the question posed in this blogs title. However lets dive into the authors work and take a look at their findings. You know, for science :)


We humans absolutely LOVE our headphones, it is reported that this market will involve over 25 billion in yearly sales by 2024 [2, that is absolutely massive. By comparison at the time of writing this the total market-cap of all crypto currencies combined is 104 billion, that's just 4 years of freekin' headphone sales. This really put things into perspective just how many headphones we all buy!


Is this why so much money is spent?

So if we are spending all of this money on our portable head speakers, perhaps it would be nice if we had some information with regards to the quality of what we are paying for. This is precisely what author Jeroen Breebaart has done for us. Jeroen took a look at the frequency response of various headphones on the market (as frequency response has been reported to be a major contributor to listener satisfaction [3].

What Was Found?

The frequency response was analyzed and is reported as the an average response based upon only one criterion, the price of the headphones:


Image From Figure 1

The headphones were grouped into classes of less expensive (4-64 USD), mid-range (64 - 279 USD), and most expensive (280 - 5120 USD!!!). Above we are looking at the frequency response of the various tested headphones, the average median response is the trace in the center, while the grey region around it is the variance between the different samples (the standard deviation). The one thing you can see from this, is that the variance in frequency range is the greatest for the cheaper headphones, while the more expensive ones have a much tighter range. Buy a cheap pair and it could have a really good frequency range, but it could also be pretty... not good. Where as if you spend a lot of money on a pair, at least you can take some comfort that the frequency range will be pretty good (but who spends 5K on headphones!?).

The author also took a look at how various headphones frequency responses fit to an "ideal" frequency response as determined in a previous publication. [4]


Image From Figure 3

Then root-mean square (RMS) analysis was used to look at the magnitude of the difference between the frequency trace of each headphone set with the idealized trace.


Image From Figure 3

Better headphones would have a smaller RMS value, indicating less deviation from the idealized frequency response. Looking at the plotted data above, do you see any trend in the RMS values decreasing with increasing cost of the headphones? I sure don't and neither did the author.

The Conclusion

Very simple, no correlation was observed between the cost of a pair of headphones and the measured frequencies that the headphones produced. More expensive headphones don't at all guarantee you better sound quality, in fact, there doesn't appear to be all that huge of a change from the cheaper sets to the more expensive ones (though there are clearly a few really crappy pairs that he tested!).

What Does This Mean For Me?

You shouldn't judge headphones based on their price, just look at the reviews. If a lot of people are saying that a set of reasonably priced headphones have really great sound they are probably telling the truth. You can likely pick up a killer set with out breaking the bank!


Sources

  1. http://asa.scitation.org/doi/10.1121/1.4984044
  2. https://www.gminsights.com/pressrelease/earphone-and-headphone-market
  3. http://www.aes.org/e-lib/browse.cfm?elib=16486
  4. http://www.aes.org/e-lib/browse.cfm?elib=17940

All Non Cited Images Are From Pixabay.com or Flickr.com And Are Available Under Creative Commons Licenses

Any Gifs Are From Giphy.com and Are Also Available for Use Under Creative Commons Licences


If you like this work, please consider giving me a follow: @justtryme90. I am here to help spread scientific knowledge and break down primary publications in such a way so as to cut through the jargon and provide you the main conclusions in short (well compared to the original articles at least!) and easy to read posts.

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I did just replace my $15 dollar headphones with a pair of $100 ones. (they were on sale for $40 and the mic on my $15 broke.) The sound itself isn't really different, but the quality of the headset itself is better. Noise-cancellation really does help sound quality. I don't think that it really takes that much extra to make though. I never expected there to be no correlation though, thanks for this lol.

but it does have lights that change color.....I think that makes up for the price difference.

I never expected there to be no correlation though

Was surprising to me too. None of the expensive sets deviated very far from the "ideal" frequency response so at least they all likely did sound pretty good. So its not like if you spend a good bit of money your going to end up with a bad sounding set.

Definitely yeah to the benefits of noise cancellation, exterior noise ruins what you are listening to, so if you really want to hear the sound you gotta have it isolated right.

but it does have lights that change color

:D

Yes! I ike this post alot. I need a new pair of headphones and I was wondering what to get. I think review browsing is the best idea. Thanks for breaking it down so I don't break my bank. I wonder who would take cryptos for a pair? Sound waves are the best.

Thanks for reading! Glad you enjoyed the post. You could just use purse.io and purchase through amazon (with bitcoin).

Perfect, thank you. Gon follow you. I post the best stuff for headphones, follow back if you like what I post. Or dont, still got love for ya. Thanks for the info.

Thanks for posting this it's very informational.

Thanks for reading, I'm glad you enjoyed the write up :)

This community is so big because of steemers like you im new at this type of social network but im very glad for fo finding so interested post and dedicated people :)

Well thank you! Yeah there are a good many people around here that work hard to try to keep making steemit better and better. I'm just one small person doing his best.

the small persons makes great thinks!!

I heard that BEATS uses led weights to "feel" like higher quality.

I'm not surprised lol

I used a set of Beats headphones and I thought they sounded worse then my sennheisers thats for sure!

Yep they calculated how much the inside was worth and was like 15 euro of parts and sold for 200 euro...until he made enough and then they got a bit better,but it is a joke what only a name can do huh....

I love headphones and thanks for this info..Great post!

Thanks for reading, I thought this study was actually a pretty useful piece of information. :)

I'm glad they finally did a study on this because....... well I am really not "glad" about that but I guess it's just back up for what I've constantly thought. Not only about speakers and such but there are many things that are true to this. :) Thanks for posting.

Thank you for reading! Yeah, its easy to associate price with quality, but that is in many cases not a fair association! This study just illustrates that its definitely a poor way to judge a pair of headphones. :)

I totally agree. I have SOME things that I won't buy generics though. One of the important ones. q tips and lotion. :)

I am sure it doesn't
I had myself some headphones that would rock your brain with base and volume but a very good sound compared to beats Dr dree. Sony. Etc and honestly I never heard of that company that I don't even remember

Yeah, I've never found beats to be anything special honestly. Thanks for reading!

True beats aren't that good
You welcome

Thanks for posting! This is something I've been wondering about for awhile.

Thanks for reading, I am glad you found this summary useful!

I don't have one. Mine broke and it's too pricey to get a new one now. If my Steemit earns maybe I'd get to buy one and enjoy great audio for my music playlists. Gonna work hard here.

Hard work brings success :) Thanks for reading!

You're welcome!

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