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A Cross-Sectional Survey on the Impact of Irrelevant Speech Noise on Annoyance, Mental Health and Well-being, Performance and Occupants' Behavior in Shared and Open-Plan Offices.

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TLDR
This cross-sectional survey has compared subjective outcomes obtained from workers in shared and open-plan offices, related to irrelevant speech, which is the noise that is generated from conversations between colleagues, telephone calls and laughter.
Abstract
This cross-sectional survey has compared subjective outcomes obtained from workers in shared (2⁻5 occupants) and open-plan (+5 occupants) offices, related to irrelevant speech, which is the noise that is generated from conversations between colleagues, telephone calls and laughter. Answers from 1078 subjects (55% in shared offices and 45% in open-plan offices) have shown that irrelevant speech increases noise annoyance, decreases work performance, and increases symptoms related to mental health and well-being more in open-plan than in shared offices. Workers often use headphones with music to contrast irrelevant speech in open-plan offices, while they take a break, change their working space, close the door or work from home in shared offices. Being female, when there are more than 20 occupants, and working in southern cities without acoustic treatments in the office, make it more likely for the occupants to be annoyed by irrelevant speech noise in open-plan offices. While, working in southern cities and with acoustic treatments in the office makes it more likely that noise annoyance will be reported in shared offices. Finally, more than 70% of the interviewed in open-plan offices were willing to reduce their voice volumes when advised by a noise monitoring system with a lighting feedback.

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Occupant health in buildings: Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the opinions of building professionals and implications on research

TL;DR: In this article , the authors investigate building professionals' experience, awareness, and interest in occupant health in buildings, and assess the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on their opinions, as well as to compare the research on occupant health to professionals' opinions.
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Occupant health in buildings: Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the opinions of building professionals and implications on research

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate building professionals' experience, awareness, and interest in occupant health in buildings, and assess the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on their opinions, as well as to compare the research on occupant health to professionals' opinions.
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Infection Spread and High-Resolution Detection of Close Contact Behaviors.

TL;DR: A device for detecting and recording, second by second, the 3D indoor positioning and head and body motions of each graduate student in an office shows that students spent long time on close contact in the office which may lead to high infection risk.
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Influence of Classroom Acoustics on Noise Disturbance and Well-Being for First Graders

TL;DR: The findings of the study suggest that long reverberation times, which are associated with poor classroom acoustics as they generate higher noise levels and degraded speech intelligibility, bring pupils to a reduced perception of having fun and being happy with themselves.
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The adequacy of response rates to online and paper surveys: what can be done?

TL;DR: Suggestions for improving the effectiveness of evaluation strategy are to seek to obtain the highest response rates possible to all surveys; to take account of probable effects of survey design and methods on the feedback obtained when interpreting that feedback; and to enhance this action by making use of data derived from multiple methods of gathering feedback.
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