Abstract

In our recent work (Wang, Burgei, and Zhou, 2018) we studied the hearing loss injury among subjects in a crowd with a wide spectrum of heterogeneous individual injury susceptibility due to biovariability. The injury risk of a crowd is defined as the average fraction of injured. We examined mathematically the injury risk of a crowd vs the number of acoustic impulses the crowd is exposed to, under the assumption that all impulses act independently in causing injury regardless of whether one is preceded by another. We concluded that the observed dose-response relation can be explained solely on the basis of biovariability in the form of heterogeneous susceptibility. We derived an analytical solution for the distribution density of injury susceptibility, as a power series expansion in terms of scaled log individual non-injury probability. While theoretically the power series converges for all argument values, in practical computations with IEEE double precision, at large argument values, the numerical accuracy of the power series summation is completely wiped out by the accumulation of round-off errors. In this study, we derive a general asymptotic approximation at large argument values, for the distribution density. The combination of the power series and the asymptotics provides a practical numerical tool for computing the distribution density. We then use this tool to verify numerically that the distribution obtained in our previous theoretical study is indeed a proper density. In addition, we will also develop a very efficient and accurate Pade approximation for the distribution density.

Highlights

  • Sound is an indispensable part of our life and we experience sound every day

  • We studied the biovariability of a crowd for hearing loss injury, in the form of heterogeneous injury susceptibility

  • The unified procedure combines the advantage of power series expansion for small values of argument and the advantage of asymptotic approximation for large values of argument

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Summary

Introduction

Sound is an indispensable part of our life and we experience sound every day. A common way to measure the amount of sound is the decibel (dB) [1]. Any sound above 85 dB is potentially harmful and can cause hearing loss. In order to protect warfighters, starting 1960s the US Army conducted and funded research to assess the risk of hearing loss caused by intense impulse noise from explosive blasts and weapon firings [3]. Dr Chan and his collaborators [4] developed a dose-response model for the assessment of injury caused by impulse noise and a model for the possible recovery afterwards, based on chinchilla data. In [5], we interpreted the empirical dose-response relation from [4] for exposure to multiple sound impulses in the framework of immunity. In [6], we viewed the empirical dose-response relation from a completely different angle, in the framework of biovariability. We would like to further our study in [6] to demonstrate that the derived distribution density of injury susceptibility in [6] is well-posed

Mathematical Formulation of the Problem
Numerical procedure:
Numerical Verification of Well-Posedness
Pade Approximations
Conclusion
Findings
Disclaimer
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