Article,

A-weighted sound pressure level as a loudness/annoyance indicator for environmental sounds – Could it be improved?

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Applied Acoustics, (2007)

Abstract

A system is introduced with the purpose of showing how an auditory perception system may be built up to include the basic quantities on loudness domain. The quantities are the critical bands, the power law, and the weighting. The power law seems to be the most crucial basis for hypothesizing a loudness function. It has been shown that the power law could be applied as such by assuming the auditory perception system to have two essentially different stimuli: the intensity (sound pressure level) and pure pressure. These physically different quantities seem to be combined in the root of the power law, and in this study the roots are determined from equal-loudness contours. A loudness function is derived on the basis of this finding. By adding the weighting, a method has been constructed for assessing loudness. After defining the weighting, the equal-loudness contours are constructed and are seen to be virtually identical to the contours in ISO 226. It has also been found that the equations for deriving the contours in this standard and in the new ISO 226 may be incorrect, because there is no definition of a sensible loudness function. Finally, it is deduced that the derived weighting must be unequivocal for an auditory perception system (depending solely on the otologically representative group). Finally, the A-weighting (as part of an A-weighted sound pressure level) as such is reasonably similar to the weighting derived in this study. Therefore, this weighting is not the main problem when assessing sounds in respect to loudness. The A-weighting is thus chosen as the weighting for the indicator derived in the study for assessing environmental sounds.

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