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The Bedini Audio Spectral Enhancer (B.A.S.E. or BASE) is an audio signal processor invented by John Bedini. B.A.S.E. was used in the early 1990s during the mastering process in order to enhance sterephonic effects of several popular music recordings, such as the U.S. release of the first album by Orbital[citation needed] and the Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan soundtrack album[citation needed]. Some sources refer to the processor's effect as Bedini Audio Spatial Environment or Bedini Audio Spacial Environment.[citation needed]
Technical DetailsAccording to Bedini's company's marketing literature, B.A.S.E.-enhanced stereo sound is played through a pair of loudspeakers, its principal effect is to fool the ear into perceiving only the right-channel sound in the right ear, and the left-channel sound in the left ear, even though both ears are receiving sound from both channels.[1] Seemingly contradicting this claim, the following information was provided by John Bedini in his comments about the streaming audio station he created on December 30, 2004:
No reliable, independent verification of any of these claims has been made. Related patentIn 1985, TVI Systems, Ltd. (Los Angeles, CA) was granted US patent 4555795 for a "monaural to binaural audio processor," as invented by John Bedini. The patent says the invention could be used in parallel to process multiple audio sources such as the left and right channels of stereo output, and the resulting pair of stereo signals could then be mixed. References
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