TEDxDanubia 2011 | Julian Treasure | Conscious Listening

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  • čas přidán 22. 05. 2024
  • Julian Treasure studies sound and advises businesses on how best to use it. He wrote the book "Sound Business", a complete introduction to harnessing the power of sound in business, from branding and marketing to the telephone, the web and physical spaces such as shops, restaurants, offices and reception areas.
    Spanish subtitles by Andrea Pisera

Komentáře • 25

  • @inayatali5666
    @inayatali5666 Před 7 lety +9

    Julian, your all videos are worth listening.

  • @PramodSingh1
    @PramodSingh1 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Always great to listen to you Julien!
    Thanks 🙏

  • @neogovernment
    @neogovernment Před 12 lety +4

    Thank you for uploading this talk. Most interesting!

  • @sun_shine2959
    @sun_shine2959 Před 7 lety +3

    Really this session is appreciable, as i experienced that it create sense to value of sound make though listening.

  • @ipswoa4529
    @ipswoa4529 Před 2 lety

    Just had to throw this out there. The closed captions have a break () visible. It was incredibly distracting. I'd suggest editing them and removing the visible coding.

  • @Jay_Flippen
    @Jay_Flippen Před 10 lety +1

    2:45 People tend to use the cocktail effect to their own emotional, isolated advantage... especially at bars. 'Oh Bob can't hear me' is only a likelihood. In 2009 I went to my Chemistry lecture at Virginia Tech by long-boarding the 5 minute journey there down some hills... getting my adrenaline levels very high. About 15 or so seconds after I popped the tail of my board to carry it via hand I was walking through the lobby- which was full of conversations- and I heard someone say to his friend (on the other side of the lobby) "I wonder if people just carry skateboards around to look cool". Ye, this was and still is the most superhuman sound perception I have possessed and demonstrated... Cocktail party filtering across the room and discerning sentences which may or may not be about me. But the icing on the cake was me turning a sharp 130/140 degrees or so back over my shoulder and making eye contact with the kid. I hope I freaked him out.

  • @PrimeMatt
    @PrimeMatt Před 9 lety +4

    I don't think the media have to 'shout' because we have become desensitised, I think we have become desensitised because of the constant sensationalisation by the media.
    Everything has to be a drama, the weather is 'too hot, too cold, too wet, too dry, too moderate', everything has to be followed by an exclamation mark, (or two).
    Generally though, I've found your talks fascinating.

  • @elisabeth2959
    @elisabeth2959 Před 6 měsíci

    What about tinnitus.....this plays a huge part to listening. Never getting to enjoy complete silence .....

  • @sunitownline
    @sunitownline Před 8 lety +3

    Very interesting and eye opening

  • @altairzq
    @altairzq Před 11 lety +1

    Inspiring.

  • @AndriusSke
    @AndriusSke Před 7 lety +9

    when these skills will be introduced in western education systems ?

  • @loverlifeless2794
    @loverlifeless2794 Před 3 lety

    Everyone can teach this to everyone

  • @visualreverberations3600
    @visualreverberations3600 Před 8 lety +12

    It's quite ironic that the sound of this talk is so bad

    • @sovereigneats
      @sovereigneats Před 4 lety +4

      I wondered not that it was bad but that that there was a distinct purpose for that background noise... As the pink sound he mentions. I heard it only after stopping to dissect the sounds in the video that I was perceiving. But it is ironic lol yes.

    • @Icelandscot
      @Icelandscot Před 6 měsíci

      Perhaps it is your speaker. The sound was fine for me

    • @visualreverberations3600
      @visualreverberations3600 Před 6 měsíci

      @@Icelandscot There is an interference (an electric like sound) and quite a bit of feedbacks. That's pretty objective.

  • @oussamajaziri118
    @oussamajaziri118 Před 5 lety +3

    the crowd are either not listening or dead! react, laugh several subtle jokes didn't crack anyone

  • @rithe07
    @rithe07 Před 7 lety +1

    I heard ga ga....

  • @larrybrown7455
    @larrybrown7455 Před 3 lety +1

    Misrepresented and trivialized "Active Listening."

  • @Jay_Flippen
    @Jay_Flippen Před 10 lety

    6:12 I gotta disagree with that... When watching and listening to those sound clips, it reminds me of a poorly lipped MXC (Most Extreme Challenge) tv show. I can't always read lips, but I bet I (and other people) might not have that cross-sense skewing. Maybe if he had his mouth come a little bit closer to closed, then the phonetic mechanics might be able to be passed off on a visual basis as being something else- but he's got like a full inch gap in his lips. Come on meow.

    • @johnnyrr2643
      @johnnyrr2643 Před 5 lety +1

      Probably too late but I'll do it anyways. In my study of phonetics we got taught that this effect actually doesn't work all the time and it doesnt work for everyone the same way. It is, however, true that what we see when speaking affects us. Seeing someone speak and moving their lips triggers certain areas in your brain that are responsible for speaking yourself. It's really cool stuff i have to say

  • @lucidextract
    @lucidextract Před 11 lety +3

    "listen to live" ...what about the deaf?
    ...cochlear implants for everybody!!!

  • @geoffsmith5502
    @geoffsmith5502 Před 6 lety +2

    Pink noise has DEFINITELY NOT a flat spectrum. Julian Treasure clearly isn't an acoustician. So now I doubt everything else he mentioned. We're dealing with a charlatan here... Beware. Another thing: if I were him I'd take down this video. It's embarrassing claiming to be a sound expert in a video with TERRIBLE AUDIO. There's humm on the mic...