Toward a Psychoacoustic Annoyance Model for Urban Air Mobility Vehicle Noise (2024)
A psychoacoustic test was performed to obtain annoyance responses to noise from a quadrotor Urban Air Mobility (UAM) vehicle to aid in the development of a model of annoyance to UAM vehicle noise. Previous analysis of that test concluded that a psychoacoustic annoyance (PA) model, including the effects of loudness, sharpness, fluctuation strength and roughness, correlated well with the collected annoyance responses. This motivated (1) the assessment of other PA models available in the literature and (2) the development of a new PA model that includes other sound quality effects (e.g., tonality). To build the PA model for UAM noise, annoyance ratings to individual sounds and annoyance comparisons between pairs of sounds are first combined into a latent annoyance scale that has a correlation coefficient of 0.98 with the raw responses and that is based on just-noticeable-differences (JNDs) in annoyance. This latent annoyance (JND) scale also gives insight into the interplay of various perceptual components, such as overall loudness, temporal effects and spectral effects. The proposed PA model for UAM noise is fit to the latent annoyance scale, includes the sound quality effects mentioned above with an added term for tonality, and offers an improvement over other methods for predicting annoyance to UAM vehicle noise.
Air, Annoyance, Mobility, Model, Noise, Psychoacoustic, UAM, Urban, Vehicle
NASA/TM-20240003202, NASA Langley Research Center, Hampton, VA
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