Abstract

This paper reports the results of the third part of a field study of human responses to traffic noise. The influence of traffic noise level, community size, and socio-economic status were investigated in a controlled manner determined by subject selection procedures. Human responses were obtained from interviewer administered questionnaires, and were as spatially and temporally coincident with the noise measurements as possible. Noise measurements were obtained from several days of rapidly sampled digital recordings. Traffic noise level was the major predictor of the intensity of elicited responses. A number of other significant effects were observed largely related to community size. These were explained as due to parallel variations in the perceived necessity of vehicles, the annoyance with aircraft noise, and the logarithm of the vehicle flow rate. The results did demonstrate effects related to community size, and thus it is unwise to extrapolate the results of large city noise studies to small communities and rural areas.

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