Abstract

Five evidence-based taxonomies of everyday sounds frequently reported in the soundscape literature have been generated. An online sorting and category-labeling method that elicits rather than prescribes descriptive words was used. A total of N = 242 participants took part. The main categories of the soundscape taxonomy were people, nature, and manmade, with each dividing into further categories. Sounds within the nature and manmade categories, and two further individual sound sources, dogs, and engines, were explored further by repeating the procedure using multiple exemplars. By generating multidimensional spaces containing both sounds and the spontaneously generated descriptive words the procedure allows for the interpretation of the psychological dimensions along which sounds are organized. This reveals how category formation is based upon different cues – sound source-event identification, subjective-states, and explicit assessment of the acoustic signal – in different contexts. At higher levels of the taxonomy the majority of words described sound source-events. In contrast, when categorizing dog sounds a greater proportion of the words described subjective-states, and valence and arousal scores of these words correlated with their coordinates along the first two dimensions of the data. This is consistent with valence and arousal judgments being the primary categorization strategy used for dog sounds. In contrast, when categorizing engine sounds a greater proportion of the words explicitly described the acoustic signal. The coordinates of sounds along the first two dimensions were found to correlate with fluctuation strength and sharpness, consistent with explicit assessment of acoustic signal features underlying category formation for engine sounds. By eliciting descriptive words the method makes explicit the subjective meaning of these judgments based upon valence and arousal and acoustic properties, and the results demonstrate distinct strategies being spontaneously used to categorize different types of sounds.

Highlights

  • Categorization is a fundamental process by which meaning is applied to sensory experience (Dubois, 2000) based upon the correlational structure of the attributes of objects in the environment (Rosch, 1978)

  • The top level experiment tested ‘soundscape,’ the middle ‘nature’ and ‘manmade,’ and the bottom ‘dogs’ and ‘engines.’ The categories formed at the ‘top’ level of the taxonomy informed the selection of sounds for studies at the ‘middle’ level, and individual sound sources from the ‘middle’ level were selected for a study of

  • The results demonstrate a significant difference between the types of words used to describe categories of sounds, between the bottom and top levels, and between the bottom and middle levels of the emergent taxonomy

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Summary

Introduction

Categorization is a fundamental process by which meaning is applied to sensory experience (Dubois, 2000) based upon the correlational structure of the attributes of objects in the environment (Rosch, 1978). Knowledge about the environment is parsed and organized according to category structures. This simplifies the environment and gleans information with less cognitive. One approach to answering this question is the semantic differential method, whereby participants score concepts and events on a number of attribute rating scales. This is followed by factor analysis in order to extract the principal dimensions which are interpreted according to the attribute scales with which they most strongly correlate. A related framework is that of ‘core affect’ (for a review see Russell, 2003); this is a dimensional model of affective states as the linear combination of valence (a pleasure–displeasure continuum) and arousal (an alertness continuum)

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