Loudness level (phon) An equal-loudness contour is a measure of sound pressure (dB SPL), over the frequency spectrum, for which a listener perceives a.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Properties of sound Sound is a longitudinal wave Longitudinal waves travel at different speeds depending on the medium 25 o C 346m/s, water 1490.
Advertisements

HEARING Sound How the Ears Work How the Cochlea Works Auditory Pathway
PHYSICS OF SOUND PHYSICS OF SOUND HEARING CONSERVATION PROGRAM 1 28 Jan 2013.
Properties of Sound Neil Freebern. Sound Sound is produced when something vibrates. Vibrations disturb the air, creating variations in air pressure. Variation.
Pitch organisation in Western tonal music. Pitch in two dimensions Pitch perception in music is often thought of in two dimensions, pitch height and pitch.
Foundations of Physics
Sensation and Perception - audition.ppt © 2001 Laura Snodgrass, Ph.D.1 Audition Anatomy –outer ear –middle ear –inner ear Ascending auditory pathway –tonotopic.
Structure of human ear Understanding the processes of human auditory system are key for posting requirements for architectural acoustics. This gives us.
Sound waves and Perception of sound Lecture 8 Pre-reading : §16.3.
Sound Chapter 13.
Chapter 16: Sound 16-3 Intensity of Sound: Decibels
Dr. Jie ZouPHY Chapter 8 (Hall) Sound Spectra.
Chapter 6: The Human Ear and Voice
Unit 4: Sensation & Perception
© 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Conceptual Physics 11 th Edition Chapter 21: MUSICAL SOUNDS Noise and Music Musical Sounds Pitch Sound Intensity and Loudness.
Basic Concepts: Physics 1/25/00. Sound Sound= physical energy transmitted through the air Acoustics: Study of the physics of sound Psychoacoustics: Psychological.
The Human Ear and Hearing Sound concept research project By Alice Gold.
Harmonics, Timbre & The Frequency Domain
The ear and perception of sound (Psychoacoustics) Updated 2013Aug05 1.
Beats and Tuning Pitch recognition Physics of Music PHY103.
15.1 Properties of Sound  If you could see atoms, the difference between high and low pressure is not as great.  The image below is exaggerated to show.
The ear and perception of sound (Psychoacoustics) General Physics Version Updated 2014July07 1.
Hearing Chapter 5. Range of Hearing Sound intensity (pressure) range runs from watts to 50 watts. Frequency range is 20 Hz to 20,000 Hz, or a ratio.
Chapter 12 Sound.
Sound. Characteristics of Sound Intensity of Sound: Decibels The Ear and Its Response; Loudness Sources of Sound: Vibrating Strings and Air Columns Quality.
Sound waves and the human ear Paul
CH. 21 Musical Sounds. Musical Tones have three main characteristics 1)Pitch 2) Loudness 3)Quality.
David Meredith Aalborg University
Week 2 Sound Physics, Ranges of Hearing Frequency, Wavelength, Period, Velocity Audio Engineering & Sound Production Unit code: AUD202 AUDIO & ACOUSTICS.
 Focuses sound waves onto the ear drum  Two parts 1. The pinna which concentrates sound waves into the auditory canal. 2. The auditory canal which.
SOUND & THE EAR. Anthony J Greene2 Sound and the Ear 1.Sound Waves A.Frequency: Pitch, Pure Tone. B.Intensity C.Complex Waves and Harmonic Frequencies.
The human auditory system
SOUND PRESSURE, POWER AND LOUDNESS MUSICAL ACOUSTICS Science of Sound Chapter 6.
Hearing: Physiology and Psychoacoustics 9. The Function of Hearing The basics Nature of sound Anatomy and physiology of the auditory system How we perceive.
Intensity of a Spherical Wave
Loudness level (phon) An equal-loudness contour is a measure of sound pressure (dB SPL), over the frequency spectrum, for which a listener perceives a.
Chapter 21 Musical Sounds.
Fundamentals of Sensation and Perception
Chapter 12 Preview Objectives The Production of Sound Waves
Chapter 12: Sound and Light. Goals/Objectives  After completing the lesson, students will be able to...  Recognize what factors affect the speed of.
SOUND PRESSURE, POWER AND LOUDNESS
Physics Mrs. Dimler SOUND.  Every sound wave begins with a vibrating object, such as the vibrating prong of a tuning fork. Tuning fork and air molecules.
4. The Ear and the Perception of Sound (Psychoacoustics) Updated May 13,
~ Sound ~ The Nature of Sound  Speed of Sound  Human hearing  Doppler effect  “Seeing” with sound.
© 2005 Pearson Prentice Hall This work is protected by United States copyright laws and is provided solely for the use of instructors in teaching their.
Fourier analysis Periodic function: Any (“reasonable”) periodic function, can be written as a series of sines and cosines “vibrations”, whose frequencies.
Chapter 16: Sound 16-5 Quality of Sound, and Noise; Superposition 16-6 Interference of Sound Waves; Beats 16-7 Doppler Effect HW problems: Chapter 16:
Loudness level (phon) An equal-loudness contour is a measure of sound pressure (dB SPL), over the frequency spectrum, for which a listener perceives a.
PSYCHOACOUSTICS A branch of psychophysics
Hearing. (Perception of Sound)
Hearing. (Perception of Sound)
Loudness level (phon) An equal-loudness contour is a measure of sound pressure (dB SPL), over the frequency spectrum, for which a listener perceives a.
Hearing. (Perception of Sound)
Section 1: Sound Preview Key Ideas Bellringer Properties of Sound
Structure and Function
Ch Sound The Nature of Sound Speed of Sound Human Hearing
15.3 Sound, Perception, and Music
Hearing, not trying out for a play
Sound Intensity and Resonance
Chapter 16: Sound HW problems: Chapter 16: Pb.2, Pb.18, Pb.24, Pb.35, Pb.40, Pb.62: Due Wed., Jan. 17.
Properties of sound Sound is a longitudinal wave
C-15 Sound Physics 1.
How We Hear.
Fundamentals of Sensation and Perception
Fundamentals of Sensation and Perception
Sound Sound is a type of energy made by vibrations. When any object vibrates, it causes movement in the air particles. These particles bump into the particles.
Chapter 16: Sound.
Chapter 12 Sound © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc..
Musical Sounds Chapter 21.
Waves & Sound The Nature of Sound Speed of Sound Human hearing
Presentation transcript:

Loudness level (phon) An equal-loudness contour is a measure of sound pressure (dB SPL), over the frequency spectrum, for which a listener perceives a constant loudness when presented with pure steady tones. Hearing sensitivity is maximum near the first resonant frequency 3.5 - 4.0 kHz of the outer ear canal, and has another peak at the second resonance ~13kHz Phon is equal to the sound pressure level in decibels at f = 1 kHz The unit of measurement for loudness levels is the phon, and is arrived at by reference to equal-loudness contours. By definition two sine waves, of differing frequencies, are said to have equal-loudness level measured in phons if they appear equally loud to the average young person without significant hearing impairment.

Loudness of pure tones (sone) Loudness S in sones: Loudness level in phones: sone   1    2    4    8   16   32   64  128 256 512 1024 phon 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 110 120 130 140 Loudness level (see previous slid) has been constructed using sound pressure level, which is logarithmic function of intensity. Because of that loudness level is slow function of intensity. Sone has been introduced to “return beck “ Loudness level, and sone are based on the average listener sensation of loudness. Sound pressure level and intensity are independent on the listener sensation.

Musical dynamics and loudness Dynamic range: the range of sound level in musical performance

Loudness and Masking When the ear is exposed to two or more different tones, one can mask the other. Example: Hearing threshold of the weaker tone is shifted up by the louder tone. Pure tones close together in frequency mask each other more then tones widely separated Pure tone masks tones of higher frequency more effectively then tones of lower frequency The grater intensity of the masking tone, the broader the range of frequencies it can mask Forward masking Backward masking

Loudness and duration: impulsive sounds adaptation Ear averages sound energy over about 0.2s (so loudness grows with duration up to this value) Acoustic reflex Ear has protection against very loud sound (above 85 dB). It is protected by muscles attached to eardrum and the ossicles of the middle ear. They move stirrup-shaped bone away from the oval window of the cochlea. The reflex dos not begin until 30-40 ms after sound overload occurs. Adaptation – sensation decrees with prolonged stimulation (small effect) Fatigue – laud sound effects ability to hear another sound at a later time

Fourier analysis T is period Any periodic vibration, however, complicated, can be built up from a series of simple vibrations, whose frequencies are harmonics of a fundamental frequency, by choosing the proper amplitudes and phases of these harmonics. Compare this mathematical statement with the fact that practically any music can be played on piano. Periodic function: T is period f=1/T is fundamental frequency nf - harmonics Fourier analysis – the determination of harmonic component of a periodic function Fourier Synthesis - the construction of a complex function from its harmonics (the opposite of Fourier analysis)

Spectrum - specification of the strengths of the various harmonics Examples: A square wave has a spectrum with a fundamental followed by odd harmonics with the ratio of the amplitudes being 1/n A triangle wave has a spectrum with a fundamental followed by odd harmonics, but the ratio of the amplitudes is 1/n2 A saw tooth wave has a spectrum with both odd and even harmonics and amplitude ratio of 1/n2 f An 1 3 5 7

Comments about spectra of musical instruments The spectra for musical instruments vary depending on the way in which the instrument is played (soft, loud, high, low or midrange) how the sound is recorded (near field, far field, reverberant field, direction of microphone from the instrument) Typical spectra of voiced instruments (such as a violin, trumpet, guitar) have sharply defined peaks The spectra of unvoiced instruments (such a drums) have a broadband of frequency responses with no clearly defined peaks