logo
Loading...
On the definition of noise

Environmental Studies and Forestry

On the definition of noise

F. Liu, S. Jiang, et al.

Discover how urbanization impacts our perception of noise! This study, conducted by Fangfang Liu and colleagues, explores the multifaceted experience of noise through interviews with 78 participants, revealing insightful categories that can reshape our approach to noise control and utilization.... show more
Abstract
Urbanization has exposed people to extreme sound levels. Although researchers have investigated the ability of people to listen, analyze, and distinguish sound, the concept of noise has not been clearly articulated from a human perspective. The lack of knowledge on how people perceive noise limits our capacity to control it in a targeted manner. This study aimed to interpret the definition of noise from the public perspective based on a grounded theory approach. Seventy-eight participants were interviewed about noise, and four categories of perceived understanding of noise were identified: challenges, definitions of noise, opportunities, and action. As one of the challenges, urbanization is associated with increased noise levels around the human environment. In terms of definition, perceiving sound as noise is considered to be a result of the complex and dynamic process that includes sound, the environment, and humans. Sound and humans interact with the environment. In terms of opportunities, noise may have positive roles on certain occasions, dispelling the misconception that noise is exclusively negative. In addition, we found that noise perception has gradually shifted from noise control to noise utilization. In terms of action, noise can be controlled at the sound sources, susceptible target groups, susceptible behaviors and states, locations, and times where noise is perceived with high frequency. In this study, we investigated several aspects of noise, ranging from noise control, soundscape definition, and ‘soundscape indices’ (SSID) integration and application. Our findings provide an additional basis for developing better definitions, control, and utilization strategies of noise in the future, thereby improving the quality of the sound environment.
Publisher
Humanities and Social Sciences Communications
Published On
Nov 08, 2022
Authors
Fangfang Liu, Shan Jiang, Jian Kang, Yue Wu, Da Yang, Qi Meng, Chaowei Wang
Tags
urbanization
noise perception
grounded theory
environmental factors
public challenges
technology adaptation
Listen, Learn & Level Up
Over 10,000 hours of research content in 25+ fields, available in 22+ languages.
No more digging through PDFs, just hit play and absorb the world's latest research in your language, on your time.
listen to research audio papers with researchbunny