Journal ArticleDOI
Review of field studies of aircraft noise-induced sleep disturbance
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TLDR
A literature review of recent field studies of AN-ISD finds that reliable generalization of findings to population-level effects is complicated by individual differences among subjects, methodological and analytic differences among studies, and predictive relationships that account for only a small fraction of the variance in the relationship between noise exposure and sleep disturbance.Abstract:
Aircraft noise-induced sleep disturbance (AN-ISD) is potentially among the more serious effects of aircraft noise on people. This literature review of recent field studies of AN-ISD finds that reliable generalization of findings to population-level effects is complicated by individual differences among subjects, methodological and analytic differences among studies, and predictive relationships that account for only a small fraction of the variance in the relationship between noise exposure and sleep disturbance. It is nonetheless apparent in the studied circumstances of residential exposure that sleep disturbance effects of nighttime aircraft noise intrusions are not dramatic on a per-event basis, and that linkages between outdoor aircraft noise exposure and sleep disturbance are tenuous. It is also apparent that AN-ISD occurs more often during later than earlier parts of the night; that indoor sound levels are more closely associated with sleep disturbance than outdoor measures; and that spontaneous awa...read more
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The Effect of Transportation Noise on Health and Cognitive Development:A Review of Recent Evidence - eScholarship
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David S. Michaud,Katya Feder,Stephen E. Keith,Sonia A. Voicescu,Leonora Marro,John Than,Mireille Guay,Allison Denning,Brian J. Murray,Shelly K. Weiss,Paul J. Villeneuve,Frits van den Berg,Tara Bower +12 more
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Aircraft noise-induced awakenings are more reasonably predicted from relative than from absolute sound exposure levels.
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An exploratory spatial analysis to assess the relationship between deprivation, noise and infant mortality: an ecological study.
Wahida Kihal-Talantikite,Cindy Padilla,Cindy Padilla,Benoît Lalloué,Benoît Lalloué,Christophe Rougier,Jérôme Defrance,Denis Zmirou-Navier,Denis Zmirou-Navier,Séverine Deguen,Séverine Deguen +10 more
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References
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Journal ArticleDOI
Waking levels of salivary biomarkers are altered following sleep in a lab with no further increase associated with simulated night-time noise exposure.
David S. Michaud,Susan M. Miller,C. Ferrarotto,Anne T. M. Konkle,Stephen E. Keith,Kenneth B. Campbell +5 more
TL;DR: Overall sleep quality was rated slightly higher upon awakening from sleep at home, and cortisol and melatonin levels were higher following sleep in the laboratory 30 minutes after awakening, suggesting that these endpoints were not influenced by exposure to noise on the 2nd night.
Journal ArticleDOI
Behavioral awakening as functions of duration and detectability of noise intrusions in the home
TL;DR: In this paper, the probability of awakening associated with increasing levels of in-home exposure to four different sounds was estimated and found that sounds of equivalent time-integrated detectability appeared to have equal probabilities of awakening people.
Journal ArticleDOI
A pragmatic re‐analysis of sleep disturbance data
TL;DR: A re‐analysis of original data from one of the field studies generalizes the dose‐response relationships between a single event noise metric and an awakening response and accounts for person‐to‐person variation in awakening sensitivity to noise.