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Detectability and annoyance of warning sounds for electric vehicles
Author(s) -
Étienne Parizet,
Ryan Robart,
JeanChristophe Chamard,
Joseph Schlittenlacher,
Perceval Pondrom,
Wolfgang Ellermeier,
Fabio Biancardi,
Karl Janssens,
Paul Speed-Andrews,
James Cockram,
Gemma Hatton
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
the journal of the acoustical society of america
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.619
H-Index - 187
eISSN - 1520-8524
pISSN - 0001-4966
DOI - 10.1121/1.4805556
Subject(s) - annoyance , timbre , noise (video) , quiet , acoustics , computer science , soundscape , road traffic , traffic noise , perception , speech recognition , sound (geography) , loudness , engineering , transport engineering , psychology , noise reduction , artificial intelligence , computer vision , art , musical , physics , image (mathematics) , quantum mechanics , neuroscience , visual arts
Electric or hybrid vehicles are very quiet at low speeds, which represents a very good opportunity to reduce traffic noise annoyance in cities. On the other hand, this may be very hazardous for vulnerable pedestrians (e.g. visually impaired people). The aim of the eVADER project is to propose solutions in order to add warning sounds to such cars, while fulfilling two contradictory goals : sounds should be detectable but should not contribute to traffic noise annoyance. Different perceptual experiments have been conducted : the first one evaluated the influence of various timbre parameters on sound detectability. It was shown that an electric vehicle equipped with one particular sound was as easily detected as a diesel one, while keeping a very low level. Then the influence of some timbre parameters (pitch and temporal modulation frequency) on the distance and speed as perceived by listeners was measured. Finally, a third experiment was devoted to the consequence on traffic noise annoyance of such warning sounds.

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