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Annoyance

About: Annoyance is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 2015 publications have been published within this topic receiving 38300 citations. The topic is also known as: annoy.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Primary analyses of pre-existing laboratory and epidemiological data focusing on the relationship between noise sensitivity to and annoyance with a variety of olfactory-related stimuli failed to support the notion that, by itself, negative affectivity explains sensitivity to noise.
Abstract: Some studies indicate that noise sensitivity is explained by negative affect, a dispositional tendency to negatively evaluate situations and the self. Individuals high in such traits may report a greater sensitivity to other sensory stimuli, such as smell, bright light and pain. However, research investigating the relationship between noise sensitivity and sensitivity to stimuli associated with other sensory modalities has not always supported the notion of a common underlying trait, such as negative affect, driving them. Additionally, other explanations of noise sensitivity based on cognitive processes have existed in the clinical literature for over 50 years. Here, we report on secondary analyses of pre-existing laboratory (n = 74) and epidemiological (n = 1005) data focusing on the relationship between noise sensitivity to and annoyance with a variety of olfactory-related stimuli. In the first study a correlational design examined the relationships between noise sensitivity, noise annoyance, and perceptual ratings of 16 odors. The second study sought differences between mean noise and air pollution annoyance scores across noise sensitivity categories. Results from both analyses failed to support the notion that, by itself, negative affectivity explains sensitivity to noise.

22 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Changes in present USA noise-measurement procedures and noise-control guidelines are proposed that provide more accurate predictions of annoyance, related adverse effects, and criteria for setting "tolerable" limits of noise exposure in residential areas.
Abstract: A demonstration field-research study reveals that aircraft noise measured at two one-story houses is ∼9dB less attenuated from measured outdoor levels than is street traffic noise, and, found in other studies, ∼14dB less than railway noise. Comparable differences are found between these noises from the application of basic acoustical formulas for quantifying attenuations that occur on site of one- and two-story houses. Reasonably consistent with those findings are results from attitude surveys showing that daily exposure levels of aircraft must be ∼8dB less than levels of street traffic noise, and ∼13dB less than levels of railway noise to be perceived as an equal cause of annoyance and related adverse effects. However, USA government guidelines recommend that equal exposure levels of noise measured outdoors from vehicles of transportation should be considered as being equally annoying. Changes in present USA noise-measurement procedures and noise-control guidelines are proposed that provide more accurate...

22 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The paper is a report of the effects of community exposure to multiple sources of odor associated with petroelum refineries and other components of the petrochemical industry.

22 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
2023187
2022275
202166
202055
201968
201890