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Review of acoustic comfort evaluation in dwellings : part II—impact sound data associated with subjective responses in laboratory tests

Vardaxis, Nikolaos Georgios LU and Bard, Delphine LU (2018) In Building Acoustics 25(2). p.171-192
Abstract

The concept of acoustic comfort is hardly defined and used to refer to conditions of low noise levels or annoyance based on standardized descriptors. Airborne and impact sound measurements are used to rate acoustic comfort in dwellings, but they often do not express human perception of noise or comfort. If the descriptors are statistically associated with self-reported responses, they can be used as prediction models and considered sufficient for acoustic comfort assessment. This review article presents studies that approach acoustic comfort in dwellings via the association of acoustic data and subjective responses in laboratory tests. Specifically, we investigate the cases of impact sound, since it is usually reported as the most... (More)

The concept of acoustic comfort is hardly defined and used to refer to conditions of low noise levels or annoyance based on standardized descriptors. Airborne and impact sound measurements are used to rate acoustic comfort in dwellings, but they often do not express human perception of noise or comfort. If the descriptors are statistically associated with self-reported responses, they can be used as prediction models and considered sufficient for acoustic comfort assessment. This review article presents studies that approach acoustic comfort in dwellings via the association of acoustic data and subjective responses in laboratory tests. Specifically, we investigate the cases of impact sound, since it is usually reported as the most disturbing noise source in dwellings. We also evaluated the reviewed studies with the Bradford Hill’s criteria. The reviewed studies indicate that self-reported annoyance to impact sound is an important issue and it can be predicted well in overall. Various standardized descriptors are studied and associate sufficiently with subjective responses. Inclusion of low frequencies down to 50 Hz in measurements improves the association of impact sound descriptors to subjective responses. Some impact noise stimuli associate only with some descriptors but not all. From the standardized impact sources, the tapping machine is the most efficient to predict overall annoyance and the impact ball for human walking or typical impact sounds in dwellings.

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author
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organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Acoustic comfort, association, evaluation, impact sound, laboratory, subjective responses
in
Building Acoustics
volume
25
issue
2
pages
171 - 192
publisher
Multi-Science Publishing
external identifiers
  • scopus:85047431772
ISSN
1351-010X
DOI
10.1177/1351010X18772026
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
7b814a5f-2488-42dc-aaab-550f4111090b
date added to LUP
2018-06-05 12:18:14
date last changed
2022-04-25 07:41:16
@article{7b814a5f-2488-42dc-aaab-550f4111090b,
  abstract     = {{<p>The concept of acoustic comfort is hardly defined and used to refer to conditions of low noise levels or annoyance based on standardized descriptors. Airborne and impact sound measurements are used to rate acoustic comfort in dwellings, but they often do not express human perception of noise or comfort. If the descriptors are statistically associated with self-reported responses, they can be used as prediction models and considered sufficient for acoustic comfort assessment. This review article presents studies that approach acoustic comfort in dwellings via the association of acoustic data and subjective responses in laboratory tests. Specifically, we investigate the cases of impact sound, since it is usually reported as the most disturbing noise source in dwellings. We also evaluated the reviewed studies with the Bradford Hill’s criteria. The reviewed studies indicate that self-reported annoyance to impact sound is an important issue and it can be predicted well in overall. Various standardized descriptors are studied and associate sufficiently with subjective responses. Inclusion of low frequencies down to 50 Hz in measurements improves the association of impact sound descriptors to subjective responses. Some impact noise stimuli associate only with some descriptors but not all. From the standardized impact sources, the tapping machine is the most efficient to predict overall annoyance and the impact ball for human walking or typical impact sounds in dwellings.</p>}},
  author       = {{Vardaxis, Nikolaos Georgios and Bard, Delphine}},
  issn         = {{1351-010X}},
  keywords     = {{Acoustic comfort; association; evaluation; impact sound; laboratory; subjective responses}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{2}},
  pages        = {{171--192}},
  publisher    = {{Multi-Science Publishing}},
  series       = {{Building Acoustics}},
  title        = {{Review of acoustic comfort evaluation in dwellings : part II—impact sound data associated with subjective responses in laboratory tests}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1351010X18772026}},
  doi          = {{10.1177/1351010X18772026}},
  volume       = {{25}},
  year         = {{2018}},
}