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Hearing and other senses
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Sound Sound: sensed variations in air pressure
Frequency: number of peaks that pass a point per second (Hz) Pitch hearing.ppt
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Sound Measurement Range: p < 0.001 mbar (normal breathing)
p > 1000 mbar (jet plane) hearing.ppt
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Sound Pressure Level (SPL)
SPL = Lp = 20 log10 ( p/pr) p = RMS sound pressure of target sound pr = RMS sound pressure of reference sound (e.g mbar) SPL units: decibels (dB) hearing.ppt
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Representative SPLs hearing.ppt
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Sound Measurement Devices
The device on the left is a sound level meter and is primarily used for noise abatement activities and acoustical work such as determining noise control criteria for an occupancy or for ambient noise analysis and control. The device in the center is a sound level meter/noise dosimeter which accumulates, or logs noise exposure for an entire work shift. This instrument is primarily used for OSHA hearing conservation activities. The device on the right is a previous-generation sound level meter. hearing.ppt
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A, B, and C Scales hearing.ppt
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The Ear Adapted from: (http://www.teleport.com/~veda/gallery.html)
hearing.ppt
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Hearing Anatomy & Physiology
Pinna Auditory Canal Tympanic Membrane Ossicles Malleus (hammer) Incus (anvil) Stapes (stirrup) Ligaments Muscles Amplitude reduction Pressure amplification Attenuation reflex (protection, low frequency masking) Oval Window Cochlea Auditory Nerve Auditory Cortex
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Cochlea Oval Window Scala Vestibuli & Scala Media Helicotrema Stapes
Basilar Membrane Organ of corti Hair cells Scala Tympani Round Window High Frequency Low Frequency
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hearing.ppt
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Auditory Experience Sound intensity/SPL Loudness Frequency Pitch
hearing.ppt
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Psychophysical Scaling
loudness not directly proportional to intensity psychophysical perceived loudness) scales Phons Equal loudness contours phons = 1000 Hz Sones Relative subjective loudness 1 sone = dB 2 sones = sound judged twice as loud as 1 sone sound hearing.ppt
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Sensitivity Range of Hearing: 20 - 20,000 Hz
Highest Sensitivity: 1, ,000 Hz Lowest Detectable Intensity: 0 dB hearing.ppt
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Limits hearing.ppt
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Equal-loudness contour
hearing.ppt
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equal pitch contours hearing.ppt
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Discriminability Ability to distinguish between two simuli (e.g. sounds) Frequency - Pitch Intensity - Loudness Spectrum Phase (?) Just Noticable Difference (JND) Least change in a stimulus or the least difference between two stimuli that can be detected 50 % of time. hearing.ppt
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Absolute Discrimination
Dimension (s) # of Levels Intensity 4 - 5 Frequency 4 - 7 Duration 2 - 3 Intensity & Frequency 9 hearing.ppt
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Masking Sound A (masking sound) reduces sensitivity of ear to Sound B (masked sound). Raised threshold for B (masked threshold). hearing.ppt
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Masking by Pure Tones
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Masking by Wideband Noise
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Reducing Masking Signal Control Noise Control
Selection - distinction from noise Intensity - above masked threshold Noise Control Selection - distinct from signal Intensity - reduce Filter - alter spectrum to reduce masking hearing.ppt
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Alarms Rationale for auditory alarms Criteria for auditory alarms
sound omnidirectional can’t “close” our ears Criteria for auditory alarms must be above background sound must not be above danger level should not be overly startling (longer rise time) should not interfere with other signals should be informative hearing.ppt
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Designing Auditory Alarms
do task analysis stay within limits of absolute judgement capitalize on the dimensions pitch envelope rhythm timbre design sound specifics hearing.ppt
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False Alarms false alarms loss of trust disabling of alarms
missed signals hearing.ppt
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Speech Example: Tenerife bottom-up issues top-down issues hearing.ppt
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Masking Effects female voice more vulnerable
consonant sounds (esp. s, ch) more susceptible to masking than vowels “fly to” vs “fly through” hearing.ppt
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Measuring Speech Communication
Bottom-Up: Articulation Index (AI) signal-to-noise ratio speech db – noise db weighted across frequency bands Top-Down: Speech Intelligibility Level (SIL) % items correctly heard hearing.ppt
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Speech Distortions Examples clipping (beginnings, ends of words)
reduced bandwidth echoes reverberations low quality synthesized speech hearing.ppt
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Temporary Hearing Loss
Continuous noise leads to hearing loss Temporary threshold shift at 2 min (TTS2) dBA : no TTS2 dBA: TTS2 proportional to exposure hearing.ppt
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Permanent Hearing Loss
Continuous noise may lead to permanent hearing loss Begins at ~ 4000 Hz Generally restricted to Hz hearing.ppt
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Hearing Loss hearing.ppt
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Noise - Induced Hearing Loss
hearing.ppt
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Noncontinuous Noise Impact Noise (e.g. drop forge)
Impulse Noise (e.g. gunfire) Noncontinuous noise may lead to permanent hearing loss. hearing.ppt
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OSHA Standards: Continuous Noise
hearing.ppt
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OSHA Standards: Impulse Noise
hearing.ppt
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Noise Dosage total (daily) dose = sum of partial doses
Requirement: total dose < 1.00 hearing.ppt
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Example Worker exposed to 90 dBA for 4 hours, 105 dBA for 30 minutes. Within dosage limits? dBA = 4 / 8 = 0.5 dBA = 0.5 / 1 = 0.5 Total dosage = = 1.0 Since 1.0 < 1.0, dosage is OK hearing.ppt
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Physiological Effects
Short Term Effects Startle response Long Term Effects ( > 95 dBA, > 10 yrs) Hypertension Hypotension Ulcers Headaches Irritability Sleep disorders etc. hearing.ppt
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Performance Effects Increase confidence (increased misses)
Attention funneling (missed info) Performance gaps hearing.ppt
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Noise Control Source Path Receiver Design Barriers Ear plugs
Maintenance Enclosures Ear muffs Mountings Baffles Mufflers hearing.ppt
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Hearing Protectors hearing.ppt
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The Other Senses Touch Proprioception Kinesthesis
Tactile/Haptic Sense Proprioception joint angles Kinesthesis movement The Vestibular Senses motion acceleration illusions of motion hearing.ppt
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Tactual (Tactile) Displays
Stimuli mechanical thermal chemical electrical Coding shape pattern magnitude (pressure, vibration, size, displacement) Examples braille reading devices for blind K-T display hearing.ppt
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