Abstract
In a prior study, the level of fan test sounds was adjusted in a listening test using an adaptive procedure, until they became equally loud or equally preferred as a reference sound at a fixed level. Depending on the test sound, level reductions of up to 15 dB compared to the 60 dB(A) reference level were necessary to reach equal loudness or preference compared to the reference sound. It turned out that the preference-equivalent levels were highly correlated with the loudness-equivalent levels, indicating that the preference decision and the loudness judgment were closely related to each other. In a follow-up study, the measurements were extended towards a higher reference level of 75 dB(A) and a lower reference level of 45 dB(A). The preference-equivalent levels obtained at 75 dB(A) were again closely related to the loudness-equivalent levels. For the lower reference level of 45 dB(A), the preference-equivalent levels deviate from the loudness-equivalent levels by 3.5 dB on average and also the inter-individual variability increased. This result suggests an increasing effect of additional fan-noise characteristics to play a role for the preference decisions on top of the perceived loudness especially at low absolute sound pressure levels.
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