| Literature DB >> 31546577 |
Mercede Erfanian1, Andrew J Mitchell2, Jian Kang3, Francesco Aletta4.
Abstract
The soundscape is defined by the International Standard Organization (ISO) 12913-1 as the human's perception of the acoustic environment, in context, accompanying physiological and psychological responses. Previous research is synthesized with studies designed to investigate soundscape at the 'unconscious' level in an effort to more specifically conceptualize biomarkers of the soundscape. This review aims firstly, to investigate the consistency of methodologies applied for the investigation of physiological aspects of soundscape; secondly, to underline the feasibility of physiological markers as biomarkers of soundscape; and finally, to explore the association between the physiological responses and the well-founded psychological components of the soundscape which are continually advancing. For this review, Web of Science, PubMed, Scopus, and PsycINFO were searched for peer-reviewed articles published in English with combinations of the keywords 'soundscape', 'environmental noise/sound', 'physiology/physiological', 'psychology/psychological', and 'perceptual attributes/affective/subjective assessment/appraisals'. Previous research suggests that Electrocardiography (ECG) and Vectorcardiography (VCG) biometrics quantifying Heart Rate (HR), stimulus-locked experimental design, and passive listening with homogeneous populations are predominantly applied to characterize the psychophysiology underlying the soundscape. Pleasantness and arousal are the most frequent psychological descriptors for soundscape subjective appraisals. Likewise, acoustic environments are reported to inconsistently evoke physiological responses with great variability among studies. The link between the perceptual attributes and physiological responses of soundscape vary within and among existing literature. While a few studies detected a link between physiological manifestations of soundscape and the perceptual attributes, the others failed to validate this link. Additionally, the majority of the study findings were limited to one or two physiological responses.Entities:
Keywords: acoustic environment; auditory; noise; perceptual attributes; physiology; soundscape
Year: 2019 PMID: 31546577 PMCID: PMC6801404 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16193533
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1The flow of information through the different phases of the systematic review. The number of studies included in the qualitative synthesis (n = 5).
Summary of the review studies (n = 5).
| Reviewed Articles | Stimuli Length | Number of Stimuli | Metrics | Sound Source Category | Physiological Metrics | Perceptual Attributes | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Human | Natural | Mechanical | Music | Valence | Arousal | Other | |||||
|
| 30 s | 32 | 52.2–77.5 dB (A) ** | e.g., people playing tennis | - | e.g., siren | Ranging from low to high, e.g., Black arrows by Manowar | HR, SCL, RR | Valence | Arousal | - |
|
| 4 min | N/A | 40–80 dB (A) | - | from fountain and tweeting birds | road traffic (high, low and ambient) | - | HF HRV, SCL | Pleasantness | Eventfulness | Familiarity |
|
| 8 s | 150 | 71 dB (A) *,** | e.g., giggling | e.g., wind | e.g., construction | - | HR, fMRI, PET | Pleasantness | Vibrancy | - |
|
| 8 s | 18 | 60–74 dB (A) ** | e.g., vomiting | e.g., horse hooves on road | e.g., traffic noise | - | HR, RR, EMG | Pleasantness | Arousal | - |
|
| 4 min | 4 | 64 dB (A) *,** | - | e.g., ocean | e.g., road noise | - | HR, SCL | Pleasantness | Arousal, eventfulness | Dominance, familiarity |
|
| 2 min | 6 | 64 dB (A) *,** | - | e.g., ocean | e.g., road noise | - | HR, SCL | Pleasantness | Arousal, eventfulness | Dominance, familiarity |
* Normalized Auditory Stimuli. ** Leq Sound Pressure Level (SPL). *** Used sound-clips with mix sources. † Binaural Recording. HR, Heart Rate; HF HRV, High Frequency Heart Rate Variability; fMRI, Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging; PET, Positron Emission Tomography; SCL, Skin Conductance Level; RR, Respiration Rate; EMG, Electromyography.
Studies from 1990 to 2019 of the outcome of the psychophysiology of soundscape.
| Reviewed Articles | Objective (s) | Research Design | No of Participants | Key Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| (A) Evaluation of the link between the judgment of affective arousal and valence and physiological response | Stimulus locked | 31 | (A) Only RR in response to environmental sounds and music is in line with valence and arousal to a certain extent |
|
| (A) Comparison of the effects of different sounds on the physiological recovery of individuals with induced psychological stress | Latin square matrix | 40 | (A) Nature sound accelerates the physiological recovery of SNS after psychological stress |
|
| (A) Assessment of the visceral basis of cognitive and emotional responses to positive or ‘naturalistic urban soundscapes’ | Stimulus locked | 16 | (A) Increment of HR in response to the onset of auditory stimuli |
|
| (A) Investigation of variation in registered physiological responses to different soundscapes | Stimulus locked | 80 | (A) Decrement of HR, increment of RR, decrement of EMG limited to pleasant sounds |
|
| (A) Examining the variations of physiological responses to a number of auditory stimuli after a stressful task | Latin square matrix | 45 | (A) Faster recovery of SCL in response to the most pleasant and the least eventful sounds and a significant difference in mean HR only during the eventful sound |
|
| (A) Measuring the same physiological responses of soundscape during rest state | Stimulus locked | 30 | (A) SCL linked to the least pleasant, familiar, and dominating sounds specially in the first 10 s; the increase of SCL associated with the least pleasant, familiar and the most dominant; no SCL change in response to the most and the least arousing and eventful sounds; a fall in HR associated with the least pleasant and the most familiar sounds |
* Stress Task.