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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Effects of noise on mental performance and annoyance considering task difficulty level and tone components of noise.

TLDR
The results show the effect of tonal noise on annoyance and mental performance especially in different levels of task difficulty, and suggest that neural network models have high accuracy and efficiency, and can be used to predict noise annoyance.
Abstract
Rotating components in mechanical systems produce tonal noises and the presence of these tones effect the quality and comfort of occupants leading to annoyance and a decrease in mental performance. The ISO 1996-2 and ANSI S1.13 standards have described metrics to quantify the effects of prominent tones, but more research on how noise attributes effect annoyance and performance, especially in different levels of task difficulty are necessary. This paper investigates relations between noise metrics, annoyance responses and mental performance under different task difficulty levels while exposed to background noise with tonal components. In this study, sixty participants were evaluated on subjective perceived annoyance and varying workloads while exposed to 18 noise signals with three different prominence tones at three frequency tones and two background noise levels while doing three different levels of n-back tasks in a controlled test chamber. Performance parameters were measured by recording the reaction time, the correct rate, and the number of misses. The results indicate an increasing trend for number of misses and reaction times at higher task difficulty levels, but a decrease for correct rate. The study results showed a significant difference for subjective responses except for annoyance and loudness under different levels of task difficulty. The participants were more annoyed with higher background noise levels, lower tone frequencies and increasing tone levels especially under increasing task difficulty. Loudness metrics highly correlate with other noise metrics. Three models for the prediction of perceived annoyance are presented based on the most strongly correlated noise metrics using neural network models. Each of the three models had different input parameters and different network structures. The accuracy and MSE of all three neural network models show it to be appropriate for predicting perceived annoyance. The results show the effect of tonal noise on annoyance and mental performance especially in different levels of task difficulty. The results also suggest that neural network models have high accuracy and efficiency, and can be used to predict noise annoyance. Model 1 is preferred in certain aspects, such as lower input parameters, making it more user-friendly. The best neural network model included both loudness metrics and tonality metrics. It seems that combined metrics have the least importance and are unnecessary in the proposed neural network model.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Attention and short-term memory during occupational noise exposure considering task difficulty

TL;DR: The noise-induced impaired cognitive function is mainly due to omission errors in medium tasks, and commission errors in both simple and difficult tasks.

How Tonality and Loudness of Noise relate to Annoyance and Task Performance” Noise Control Eng. J. 65(2), 71-82.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the relationship between current noise metrics, annoyance, and task performance under various tonal noise conditions through subjective testing and found that loudness metrics are most highly correlated with annoyance responses, while tonality metrics demonstrate relatively less but also significant correlation with annoyance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Analysis of Factors Affecting Human Reliability in the Mining Process Design Using Fuzzy Delphi and DEMATEL Methods

TL;DR: In this paper , a fuzzy DEMATEL method was used to identify, rank, and investigate cause-and-effect relationships among variables influencing human error in surface mine design in Iran based on expert opinions, and two rounds of the Fuzzy Delphi study were carried out to reach a consensus among experts.
Journal ArticleDOI

Innovative solution to enhance the Helmholtz resonator sound absorber in low-frequency noise by nature inspiration

TL;DR: Fibonacci sequence is utilized to investigate Helmholtz resonator arrangement to increase both the amount of sound absorption coefficient and frequency bandwidth of absorption without changing the total volume of resonator array with equal size units.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of the uneven blade spacing on the noise annoyance of axial-flow fans and side channel blowers

TL;DR: In this paper, several rotors of axial-flow fans and side channel blowers with optimal circumferential spacing have been tested in a hemi-anechoic chamber; such rotors were designed by means of an existing method based on the minimization of the tonal noise peaks prominence from the broadband spectrum.
References
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Dopaminergic foundations of schizotypy as measured by the German version of the Oxford-Liverpool Inventory of Feelings and Experiences (O-LIFE)-a suitable endophenotype of schizophrenia.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The development of the noise sensitivity questionnaire.

TL;DR: A significant difference in annoyance rates was observed between the low and high noise sensitive groups for both the subscales habitation and work, which support the validity of NoiSeQ.
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Does background noise and task difficulty interact during problem solving?

Background noise and task difficulty interact during problem solving, affecting annoyance and mental performance. Higher difficulty levels and louder background noise increase annoyance, impacting reaction times and correct rates.