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The Difference Between Mono, Stereo, Surround, Binaural & 3D Sound

Mono audio plays the same audio through both channels, while stereo separates audio into left and right channels. Surround sound mixes audio into 5.1 or more channels for playback through multiple speakers. Binaural audio captures sound from the perspective of the listener, allowing them to localize sounds from any direction when listening on headphones. 3D audio is an emerging format that uses various techniques to place virtual sound sources in 3D space and have them move realistically as the listener's orientation changes.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
92 views

The Difference Between Mono, Stereo, Surround, Binaural & 3D Sound

Mono audio plays the same audio through both channels, while stereo separates audio into left and right channels. Surround sound mixes audio into 5.1 or more channels for playback through multiple speakers. Binaural audio captures sound from the perspective of the listener, allowing them to localize sounds from any direction when listening on headphones. 3D audio is an emerging format that uses various techniques to place virtual sound sources in 3D space and have them move realistically as the listener's orientation changes.

Uploaded by

sandeep Bhanot
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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The Difference Between Mono, Stereo, Surround,

Binaural & 3D Sound


Audio is in the midst of a renaissance. The new Iphones now come standard with stereo
speakers, bluetooth headphone sales have surpassed those of wired, apple has removed the
headphone jack, podcasts audiences are doubling by the month and the rise of virtual reality
content has both brought binaural audio, a century old audio format back into the spotlight
and introduced a new one: 3d sound.

The way we create and consume sound on our mobile devices, desktops and home theaters is
changing. it’s important to understand the difference between these formats since one might
be better used in your story than others. not every interview wants to be recorded in binaural,
but not every podcast wants to be recored in mono. it’s important to know what format you
want your sound recorded in, as it will affect how your audience takes in the experience.

1. Mono
One of the most widely used formats out there, mono (meaning one) audio is single channel
audio. with mono, all audio is sent through one channel for playback. for example, if you are
listening to mono audio, you will notice that whatever you hear in your right earbud, you will
hear in the left earbud. that is because your speakers are playing back the same single channel
audio file into both earbuds. you won’t hear the drums in your left ear, or the guitar in your
right. everything will just sound like its right in front of you, evenly dispersed through both
earbuds. your Iphone’s built in mic captures mono audio. hear the difference below:

2. Stereo
an upgrade to mono, stereo audio is 2 channel audio. with stereo audio you can localize audio
sources to the left and right when listening, but not above, behind or below. most of the music
you listen to on Spotify or shows you watch on Netflix have been mixed in stereo so that you
can have drums mixed to the right, or sense a character walking on from the left of the screen.
hear the difference below:

3. Surround sound
Companies like dts, dolby digital and thx invented surround sound technology for
commercial and home theaters. surround sound is mainly seen as a mixing process and
playback experience. an engineer in a studio can take several mono and stereo audio files and
use a computer program to create a surround sound mix. once this surround sound mix is
created, it can be played back through a surround sound speaker system. surround systems
can be anywhere from 5.1 (5 speakers, one subwoofer) to 7.1 to 21.1, all depends on how
many speakers you want to mix for during the mixing process. once more, companies like
Dts and dolby have created algorithms that home theater receivers license. when audio passes
through one of these receivers that licenses the surround sound tech, the receiver digitally
splits it to the surround speakers in your room. fun fact: when playing Hooke audio binaural
3d audio through a home theatre receiver, it will actually disperse to all of your speakers in
surround sound. think of the Hooke verse as a surround sound capturing microphone.
4. Binaural
An upgrade to stereo audio and much more accessible format than surround audio is binaural
audio. binaural audio is sound captured identically to the way we hear the world. when audio
is captured with a binaural microphone like the hooke verse (www.hookeaudio.com), it is
capturing the exact location of every sound source and where it is in relation to the recordist
upon capture. when you listen back to binaural audio recording on any 2 channel system you
will feel like you are there in the moment, hearing it identically to the way the recordist did
when they were capturing it. hear for yourself and for more info on binaural audio, see here:
https://hookeaudio.com/blog/2017/08/08/binaural-audio-the-sound-of-the-21st-century/

5. 3d Audio
The newest and least defined format in the world of audio is 3d audio. virtual reality has
brought about this format as most audiences in vr experiences want the sound to move around
them as they explore virtual environments just like the visuals do. 3d audio can be created in
a variety of different ways, if you’re designing a video game or animated vr film, you will
use a computer program to artificially place sound sources in an environment so that when
the audience member explores the environment, those sounds are present. if you’re capturing
live action video, you’ll want to use a binaural or ambisonics mic then a computer program to
burn that audio to your vr video so that when an audience member experiences the video, the
sound moves with them.

Thanks for reading and if you have any questions, please leave them in the comments section
below. record on!
from one ear to another,

Anthony Mattana

Founder, Hooke Audio

HOOKEAUDIO
#HookeAudio - Hooke Verse & Lav - A #3daudio company changing the way you record the
world #Anthony

Best Smartphone Audio Interfaces and Adapters 


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