Good evening mattkhan and Hendrik,
Please forgive the interlude prior to replying to your last couple of posts. The additional information you’ve provided is all very helpful in better understanding what’s going on ! The light slowly dawns…..
I have now tried a direct A/B comparison between a 5.1 source and its 2Ch counterpart (both native commercial recordings of the same music), toggling the Polarity Filter in a similar manner. This demonstrates the following characteristics:
5.1• Ls/Rs Correlation Meter typically between +0.3 and +0.5; an occasional blip to around -0.2
• Rear Sound is clear and distinct (as you would expect)
• If a Reverse Polarity Filter is applied, the meter obviously goes negative; the sound is noticeably ‘thinner’ and with less bass
2Ch with JRSS Upmix to 5.1• Ls/Rs Correlation Meter typically between -0.5 and -0.8
• Rear Sound is also clear and distinct…..
• If a Reverse Polarity Filter is applied, the meter goes positive BUT the sound is noticeably affected. I’d almost describe as a balance / bass shift toward the Rear Right speaker
I have also observed that following both Correlation Meters
together gives a neat visual demonstration of the effects of Hendrick’s formula and tallies with the results shown in mattkhan’s REW graph.
• The movements of the L/R and Ls/Rs Meters clearly change in harmony
• The higher the positive correlation on L/R, the less the phase shift below on Ls/Rs
• The lower the correlation on L/R, the greater the phase shift on Ls/Rs
The phase behaviours seem also to vary depending on music type, including some instances (eg. electronic music, such as parts of the Interstellar soundtrack) where the L/R meter is hard over on +1 and the Ls/Rs meter also goes significantly positive for quite lengthy stretches …. This seems to tally with marked differences between Ls and Rs Peak Level values, while when the Ls/Rs Phase is in the (more normally seen) negative region, the Ls/Rs Peak values appear to be very similar. Some predominently spoken voice recordings show strong positive L/R values accompanied by low LS and Rs readings, with an occasional dip onto the negative side (again moving in harmony).
So, a rather long way round to the conclusion that the effects originally described (mostly with mono test signals) are not representative of ‘real world’ listening. And that the behaviour of the upmixed signal shouldn’t be directly compared with discretely encoded 5.1 source material.
My apologies for appearing to cast aspersions about the effectiveness of the JRSS encoder – and I agree the sentiment in mattkhan’s last post
"if you don't like upmixing, don't use it"
Fair comment ! For the record, I will be continuing to use it and am pleased to have gained a much better insight that at the start of this exploration.
Thank you for taking the time to discuss and clarify !
Best regards,
Kevin