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High pitch: Laurel (Original Post)
MrScorpio
May 2018
OP
Solly Mack
(90,758 posts)1. I didn't hear either word.
I'm so...whatever.
Siwsan
(26,242 posts)2. I didn't, either
And every time I listen to it, from various sources, I hear something different.
Solly Mack
(90,758 posts)3. Me, too. Everything but what I was supposed to hear.
Oh, well.
We are either special or aliens.
mia
(8,360 posts)4. A tool to hear both Laurel and Yanny
We Made a Tool to Help You Hear Both Laurel and Yanny
The internet erupted in disagreement on Tuesday over an audio clip in which the name being said depends on the listener. Some hear Laurel. Others hear Yanny.
We built a tool to gradually accentuate different frequencies in the original audio clip. Which word or name do you hear, and how far do you have to move the slider to hear the other? (The sliders center point represents the original recording.)
The Times traced the clip back to Roland Szabo, an 18-year-old high school student in Lawrenceville, Ga., who posts as RolandCamry on Reddit. He said Wednesday that he was working on a school project and recorded the voice from a vocabulary website playing through the speakers on his computer. People in the room disagreed about what they were hearing. Some other students created an Instagram poll, which was then shared widely on Reddit, Twitter and other sites.
One detail may frustrate some and vindicate others: He found the original clip on the vocabulary.com page for laurel, the word for a wreath worn on the head, usually a symbol of victory.
The internet erupted in disagreement on Tuesday over an audio clip in which the name being said depends on the listener. Some hear Laurel. Others hear Yanny.
We built a tool to gradually accentuate different frequencies in the original audio clip. Which word or name do you hear, and how far do you have to move the slider to hear the other? (The sliders center point represents the original recording.)
The Times traced the clip back to Roland Szabo, an 18-year-old high school student in Lawrenceville, Ga., who posts as RolandCamry on Reddit. He said Wednesday that he was working on a school project and recorded the voice from a vocabulary website playing through the speakers on his computer. People in the room disagreed about what they were hearing. Some other students created an Instagram poll, which was then shared widely on Reddit, Twitter and other sites.
One detail may frustrate some and vindicate others: He found the original clip on the vocabulary.com page for laurel, the word for a wreath worn on the head, usually a symbol of victory.
I had to open the link in an incognito window.
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2018/05/16/upshot/audio-clip-yanny-laurel-debate.html?mtrref=www.facebook.com