Hi,
yeah I talk about "critical distance" a lot, which is a phenomenon that happens in my auditory system I can detect and utilize to listen and reason with this kind of stuff.
Short story, few years ago I was doing all kinds of listening experiments with my stereo system, mono noise in particular to inspect how I perceived the phantom center to somewhat participate on some discussions about phantom center. I noticed that at a particular listening distance the phantom center changed perceptually, quite dramatically. If I was close to speakers phantom center sounded clear and well defined spatially, but if I was beyond this distance it was quite undefined in size and not so clear, bit hazy sounding.
It took me quite some time to find this phenomenon in literature / written format. Then I found David Griesinger work and what he describes as Auditory Proximity and for example Limit of Localization Distance, these concepts very accurately seemed to correlate what I perceived so I took his work as a map, or handbook, an encyclopedia to perception almost.
Main problem we have is that we read all kinds of perceptual effects and phenomenon from forums or in books and studies, like what is envelopment and that so and so milliseconds of delays should integrate and so and such should make reverb, but if you ask yourself do you actually know how to listen this stuff? What does 2ms reflections sound like? Have you heard envelopment? How to hear it? This stuff I was reading and understanding literally, but I just had no clue whether I would hear it and how and what part of perception is the two milliseconds and so on, basically how to understand what I perceive and how to connect written concepts to perception and vice versa.
Since I perceived the phantom center change quite dramatically I though this is it, a chance to do this stuff the other way around, I had perceptual effect which I could not connect to any written concept. Very profound, key to unlock understanding of what I perceive and I still think it really is. So, I think I know what envelopment is because I can link it from Griesinger papers to my perception by using the "critical distance". Closer than critical distance auditory system separates the direct sound as foreground neural stream, while the reverberation, or all the other sounds in the room get another stream the background stream, which is basically the envelopment. This all can be connected with the single perceivable event, "the critical distance", and relating written concepts to that. Reading Griesinger you now understand what is envelopment, and how to listen to that reliably! It also means there is no envelopment when one is listening beyond this "critical distance"! Assuming Griesinger work is relevant of course.
This stuff is very important for many reasons, like how we communicate perceived stuff with each other especially on audio forums, how we understand audio perception in general, how we can improve our playback systems if we wish to, how we can get best seats on a movie theater or at any live event, how we can remember a lecture if it's an important one or make sure our important words to kids get their attention to make it a lifetime lasting lesson. Audio is really big part of our lives and shape us every day and this is really important stuff in general, and at the very core with home stereo hobby stuff as well.
Example from home hifi stereo context and envelopment: turns out my place, a normal living room, the envelopment is actually very poor so I would have never actually "heard it" as such and surely would have confused word envelopment to something else! Now with Griesinger I know when envelopment is audible and how to listen to it, and I perceive it very low in level in my place but also know how to improve it if I wish: I change D/R ratio to minimum still maintaining proximity and adjust toe-in, and when it's not enough due to poor room I could use additional sound sources to enhance it. Drawing from most images of hifi setups at peoples homes the same situation is likely in most living rooms, which I can logically pursue and relate to people to better understand what they might hear as I can now relate my situation quite reliably to theirs. This kind of reasoning could yield lot's of false assumptions of course, but it is heck of a lot better to have some understanding on perception than none at all, a small chance to communicate peceptual effects successfully.
Why I think people like to listen too far out with lots of early reflections is because that gives spacious feeling sound very easily, just put speakers in room and listen anywhere and that's it, but that's actually the poor hazy sound as brain is not paying attention to the sound. Better spacious sound would be when brain pays attention but because that also needs the envelopment to work people do not easily get this good spacious sound at their homes, so it's mostly found on meticulous random positioning and luck by some in some rooms with some speakers. If one knew how to reliably listen to it, and AB toggle it on / off to evaluate it, it would be easier to improve, right?
This stuff enables to improve listening skill, which I define as understanding of what I perceive.
There is all kinds of stuff that can be reasoned from perception of "critical distance" and Griesinger paper, I have million posts on this subject on various threads and also on diyaudio.com. But, as this all could be just false, as it's just me one person trying to decipher what I perceive and how it connects to written concepts, and doing reasoning on top of it, I might be wrong many times. I do not have extensive experiment doing this, I don't know all speakers and rooms but I put a lot of weight on assumption that most people should have this "critical distance" with their speakers with their room, as it's not property of speakers or room but our auditor system we share from evolution through millions of years even. Main thing here is that I did the experiments and learned something, so I think everyone has to do this stuff them selves, learn their own perception as it's yours and only yours.
So, I urge everyone to read Griesinger studies and try and figure out a listening test to learn to hear "critical distance", to notice auditory proximity, to hear your own auditory system switch state. This is the only way I've found so far how to understand my own perception quite reliably. Then figure out whether this is something useful or not to you, by yourself. This was a lot to write, so hopefully it's good enough text to be worth your time reading through. Have fun!
edit. Here one paper specifically about spaciousness and envelopment
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/2591262_Spaciousness_and_Envelopment_in_Musical_Acoustics
Unfortunately his
website doesn't seem to load most of the time, I rarely can get it to load... Anyway, google finds most of his stuff, some in Youtube as well if you prefere to listen / watch
https://www.youtube.com/@davidgriesinger3180