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Okay, let me try again. Using pink noise is a method of measuring frequency response. It has nothing......let me repeat......nothing to do with a correct slope of how humans hear. Zip, nada, no connection in this case.Pink noise has equal energy per octave of frequency. The energy of pink noise falls off in a range of one to three db per octave (pretty wide range in loudness there). Who determined that this is the correct slope of how we hear things? I can tell you that in the first twenty years of my audio career I did a LOT of live sound. I tried the whole pink noise thing with a special (and expensive) flat response microphone. The results were always underwhelming to say the least. When you had finished getting the system perfectly flat, you could speak into your perfectly flat mic and it sounded like someone speaking through a heavy curtain. Certainly not an accurate reproduction of the source.
It happens that much natural noise is close to pink in nature.
Pink noise falls off 3 db per octave, not 1-3 db. If you have an octave or fractional octave analyzer then perfect pink noise will give a flat response across your analyzer. To REPEAT, none of this is related to how anyone hears anything. It is an alternate method of measuring frequency response.
I don't know what was wrong with your approach in your live sound work. I've done only a little, and the results were not like you describe. Sounds like an error in your approach. Sounds like you reverse EQ'd for the pink noise slope or something. I don't know. I do know using pink noise can work rather well, and that your conception of why this is done is in error.