Authors
Sanford Fidell, Barbara Tabachnick, Vincent Mestre, Linda Fidell
Publication date
2013/11/1
Source
The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
Volume
134
Issue
5
Pages
3645-3653
Publisher
AIP Publishing
Description
Assessment of aircraft noise-induced sleep disturbance is problematic for several reasons. Current assessment methods are based on sparse evidence and limited understandings; predictions of awakening prevalence rates based on indoor absolute sound exposure levels (SELs) fail to account for appreciable amounts of variance in dosage-response relationships and are not freely generalizable from airport to airport; and predicted awakening rates do not differ significantly from zero over a wide range of SELs. Even in conjunction with additional predictors, such as time of night and assumed individual differences in “sensitivity to awakening,” nominally SEL-based predictions of awakening rates remain of limited utility and are easily misapplied and misinterpreted. Probabilities of awakening are more closely related to SELs scaled in units of standard deviates of local distributions of aircraft SELs, than to absolute …
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