Abstract

The effect of vibration magnitude on frequency-dependence of discomfort of human body is always overlooked with respect to the comfort equivalence contours, particularly for high-magnitude vibration in wideband frequency. In this study, the magnitude effect of vertical vibration on discomfort of human body is investigated experimentally. Nineteen male subjects are involved in the jury test of vibration discomfort in the vertical direction with 2–5 m/s2 in magnitude up to 100 Hz. It is shown that the growth rate of discomfort may exceed 1 due to the high-magnitude vibration employed. In this condition that the rate varies around 1, the Stevens’ power law is not capable to properly represent the relationship between the subjective discomfort and the vibration magnitude. It means the equivalent comfort contours are not only dependent on the frequency range but also related to the vibration magnitude. Frequency weightings of vibration discomfort are influenced by the excitation magnitude. Practitioner summary: The occupant comfort to vertical whole-body vibration is affected by vibration magnitude. This study provides the effect of vibration magnitude on frequency-dependence of discomfort to whole-body vibration. It is suggested to propose variable frequency weightings for vibration discomfort evaluation under different magnitudes to achieve better comfort design.

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