keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37167484/unheard-unfelt-researchers-find-no-evidence-of-effects-from-wind-turbine-infrasound
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Charles W Schmidt
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
May 2023: Environmental Health Perspectives
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37130205/a-journey-through-the-field-of-fish-hearinga
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Olav Sand
My interest in fish bioacoustics was ignited more than 50 years ago and resulted in a zigzag time travel between various interesting problems that were unsettled at the time. The present paper gives a brief overview of the main topics I have worked on in the field of fish hearing, i.e., auditory function of the swim bladder, directional hearing, function of the lateral line system, and infrasound sensitivity. Rather than being a comprehensive review of these issues, the paper is autobiographical and limited...
May 1, 2023: Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37081010/infrasound-detection-of-approaching-lahars
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
J B Johnson, A Roca, A Pineda, R Mérida, R Escobar-Wolf, J F Anderson, J Mock, A Bosa, G Bejar, G P Waite
Infrasound may be used to detect the approach of hazardous volcanic mudflows, known as lahars, tens of minutes before their flow fronts arrive. We have analyzed signals from more than 20 secondary lahars caused by precipitation events at Fuego Volcano during Guatemala's rainy season in May through October of 2022. We are able to quantify the capabilities of infrasound monitoring through comparison with seismic data, time lapse camera imagery, and high-resolution video of a well-recorded event on August 17. We determine that infrasound sensors, deployed adjacent to the lahar path and in small-aperture (10 s of meters) arrays, are particularly sensitive to remote detection of lahars, including small-sized events, at distances of at least 5 km...
April 20, 2023: Scientific Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37071206/avian-navigation-the-geomagnetic-field-provides-compass-cues-but-not-a-bicoordinate-map-plus-a-brief-discussion-of-the-alternative-infrasound-direction-finding-hypothesis
#24
REVIEW
Jonathan T Hagstrum
The geomagnetic field (GMF) is a worldwide source of compass cues used by animals and humans alike. The inclination of GMF flux lines also provides information on geomagnetic latitude. A long-disputed question, however, is whether horizontal gradients in GMF intensity, in combination with changes in inclination, provide bicoordinate "map" information. Multiple sources contribute to the total GMF, the largest of which is the core field. The ubiquitous crustal field is much less intense, but in both land and marine settings is strong enough at low altitudes (< 700 m; sea level) to mask the core field's weak N-S intensity gradient (~ 3-5 nT/km) over 10 s to 100 s of km...
April 18, 2023: Journal of Comparative Physiology. A, Neuroethology, Sensory, Neural, and Behavioral Physiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36981308/quantized-information-in-spectral-cyberspace
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Milton A Garcés
The constant-Q Gabor atom is developed for spectral power, information, and uncertainty quantification from time-frequency representations. Stable multiresolution spectral entropy algorithms are constructed with continuous wavelet and Stockwell transforms. The recommended processing and scaling method will depend on the signature of interest, the desired information, and the acceptable levels of uncertainty of signal and noise features. Selected Lamb wave signatures and information spectra from the 2022 Tonga eruption are presented as representative case studies...
February 26, 2023: Entropy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36946580/the-health-effects-of-72-hours-of-simulated-wind-turbine-infrasound-a-double-blind-randomized-crossover-study-in-noise-sensitive-healthy-adults
#26
RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL
Nathaniel S Marshall, Garry Cho, Brett G Toelle, Renzo Tonin, Delwyn J Bartlett, Angela L D'Rozario, Carla A Evans, Christine T Cowie, Oliver Janev, Christopher R Whitfeld, Nick Glozier, Bruce E Walker, Roo Killick, Miriam S Welgampola, Craig L Phillips, Guy B Marks, Ronald R Grunstein
BACKGROUND: Large electricity-generating wind turbines emit both audible sound and inaudible infrasound at very low frequencies that are outside of the normal human range of hearing. Sufferers of wind turbine syndrome (WTS) have attributed their ill-health and particularly their sleep disturbance to the signature pattern of infrasound. Critics have argued that these symptoms are psychological in origin and are attributable to nocebo effects. OBJECTIVES: We aimed to test the effects of 72 h of infrasound (1...
March 2023: Environmental Health Perspectives
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36859121/modelling-and-validation-of-defects-on-infrasound-wind-noise-reduction-pipe-systems
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Samuel K Kristoffersen, Paul Vincent, Alexis Le Pichon, Stéphane Denis, Franck Larsonnier, Benoit Alcoverro, Thomas B Gabrielson
Infrasound signals are detectable from many different sources, such as earthquakes and man-made explosions. Wind-generated turbulent noise can mask incoming infrasound signals; however, pipe-array wind-noise-reduction systems (WNRSs) have been designed to reduce the level of noise in the observed pressure time series. Given that the arrival times of the signals need to be well-known to calculate the source back azimuth and trace velocity, the response of the WNRS must be known in magnitude and phase. Previous work has been performed to optimize these systems and effectively model them...
February 2023: Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36767589/does-stochastic-and-modulated-wind-turbine-infrasound-affect-human-mental-performance-compared-to-steady-signals-without-modulation-results-of-a-pilot-study
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Paweł Małecki, Małgorzata Pawlaczyk-Łuszczyńska, Tadeusz Wszołek, Anna Preis, Maciej Kłaczyński, Adam Dudarewicz, Paweł Pawlik, Bartłomiej Stępień, Dominik Mleczko
Wind turbines (WT) are a specific type of noise source, with unique characteristics, such as amplitude modulation (AM) and tonality, infrasonic and low frequency (LF) components. The present study investigates the influence of wind turbine infrasound and low frequency noise (LFN) on human well-being. In the between-subjects study design, 129 students performed a cognitive test evaluating attention and filled out questionnaires in three various exposure conditions, including background noise, synthesized LFN (reference noise) and registered WT infrasound (stimulus)...
January 26, 2023: International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36586866/a-two-dimensional-effective-sound-speed-parabolic-equation-model-for-infrasound-propagation-with-ground-topography
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Roger Waxler, Claus H Hetzer, Jelle D Assink, Philip Blom
A terrain capable parabolic equation (PE) propagation algorithm for long range infrasound propagation modeling has been implemented using Padé approximations for the various operator valued functions that arise in PE algorithms. In this work, the influence of the winds are captured by the effective sound speed approximation and propagation is restricted to the range-altitude plane. The ground topography is included by the addition of an impenetrable fluid below the ground surface. The impedance condition at the ground is handled explicitly, including both vertical and radial components...
December 2022: Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36456296/application-of-wavelet-synchrosqueezed-transforms-to-the-analysis-of-infrasound-signals-generated-by-wind-turbines
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tomasz Boczar, Dariusz Zmarzły, Michał Kozioł, Daria Wotzka
The issues reported in this article concern the development of methods applied for measurement, processing, and analysis of infrasound signals generated in association with the operation of wind farms. In particular, the discussion involves the results of the analysis using synchrosqueezed wavelet transforms of infrasound noise emitted by a 2 MW wind turbine that have been recorded during its operation in actual conditions. To record infrasound signals, a wireless measurement system was used, consisting of a base station and three synchronized mobile recording stations...
November 2022: Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36319237/deep-learning-categorization-of-infrasound-array-data
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jordan W Bishop, Philip S Blom, Jeremy Webster, Will Reichard-Flynn, Youzuo Lin
We develop a deep learning-based infrasonic detection and categorization methodology that uses convolutional neural networks with self-attention layers to identify stationary and non-stationary signals in infrasound array processing results. Using features extracted from the coherence and direction-of-arrival information from beamforming at different infrasound arrays, our model more reliably detects signals compared with raw waveform data. Using three infrasound stations maintained as part of the International Monitoring System, we construct an analyst-reviewed data set for model training and evaluation...
October 2022: Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36284830/a-novel-infrasound-and-audible-machine-learning-approach-to-the-diagnosis-of-covid-19
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Guy Dori, Noa Bachner-Hinenzon, Nour Kasim, Haitem Zaidani, Sivan Haia Perl, Shlomo Maayan, Amin Shneifi, Yousef Kian, Tuvia Tiosano, Doron Adler, Yochai Adir
Background: The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) outbreak has rapidly spread around the world, causing a global public health and economic crisis. A critical limitation in detecting COVID-19-related pneumonia is that it is often manifested as a "silent pneumonia", i.e. pulmonary auscultation that sounds "normal" using a standard stethoscope. Chest computed tomography is the gold standard for detecting COVID-19 pneumonia; however, radiation exposure, availability and cost preclude its utilisation as a screening tool for COVID-19 pneumonia...
October 2022: ERJ Open Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36261590/infrasonic-gliding-reflects-a-rising-magma-column-at-mount-etna-italy
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mariangela Sciotto, Leighton M Watson, Andrea Cannata, Massimo Cantarero, Emanuela De Beni, Jeffrey B Johnson
Infrasound is increasing applied as a tool to investigate magma dynamics at active volcanoes, especially at open-vent volcanoes, such as Mt. Etna (Italy), which are prodigious sources of infrasound. Harmonic infrasound signals have been used to constrain crater dimensions and track the movement of magma within the shallow plumbing system. This study interprets the remarkable systematic change in monotonic infrasound signals preceding a lava fountaining episode at Mt. Etna on 20 February 2021. We model the changing tones (0...
October 19, 2022: Scientific Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36239759/-infrasound-implications-for-human-medicine
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
J M Vahl, J V A Keppeler, D Krahe, K Bahrke-Rein, R Reiter, T K Hoffmann, E Goldberg-Bockhorn
Infrasound describes ubiquitous, low-frequency sound (< 20 Hz) in the environment with a long wavelength below the median hearing threshold, which can nevertheless be heard and tactilely perceived, depending on the sound pressure level and frequency spectrum. In nature, infrasound emissions usually occur only in the low-threshold range. Nevertheless, after strong and chronic exposure to usually artificially generated infrasound emissions, various effects on the ear and the body, sometimes questionably critical to health, can be observed...
October 14, 2022: HNO
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36179456/wired-for-sound-the-effect-of-sound-on-the-epileptic-brain
#35
REVIEW
Melissa Jane Maguire
Sound waves are all around us resonating at audible and inaudible frequencies. Our ability to hear is crucial in providing information and enabling interaction with our environment. The human brain generates neural oscillations or brainwaves through synchronised electrical impulses. In epilepsy these brainwaves can change and form rhythmic bursts of abnormal activity outwardly appearing as seizures. When two waveforms meet, they can superimpose onto one another forming constructive, destructive or mixed interference...
November 2022: Seizure: the Journal of the British Epilepsy Association
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36154067/infrasound-direction-of-arrival-determination-using-a-balloon-borne-aeroseismometer
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Daniel C Bowman, Jerry W Rouse, Siddharth Krishnamoorthy, Elizabeth A Silber
Free-floating balloons are an emerging platform for infrasound recording, but they cannot host arrays sufficiently wide for multi-sensor acoustic direction finding techniques. Because infrasound waves are longitudinal, the balloon motion in response to acoustic loading can be used to determine the signal azimuth. This technique, called "aeroseismometry," permits sparse balloon-borne networks to geolocate acoustic sources. This is demonstrated by using an aeroseismometer on a stratospheric balloon to measure the direction of arrival of acoustic waves from successive ground chemical explosions...
May 2022: JASA express letters
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36070740/-re-wind-turbine-and-infrasound-no-evidence-for-health-related-impairment-a-physical-medical-and-social-report
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Werner Mathys, H-Jürgen Friesen, Iris Schmonsees
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
September 2022: Deutsche Medizinische Wochenschrift
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36050176/spatial-resolution-impacts-on-local-infrasound-propagation
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Michelle E Swearingen, Ross E Alter, Sarah McComas, Mihan H McKenna Taylor
The accuracy of input meteorological data can significantly impact the successful prediction of infrasound propagation at local to near-regional distances. These meteorological inputs are often derived from weather model simulations when event-specific measurements are not available, but the ideal spatial resolutions of these simulations have not been determined. This study seeks to identify the ideal horizontal resolutions for input meteorological data via infrasound simulations conducted with both range-dependent and -independent inputs...
August 2022: Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35931546/the-effect-of-the-stratopause-on-the-structure-of-the-infrasound-signal-from-the-august-4-2020-beirut-explosion
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
O E Popov, A A Mishenin, S N Kulichkov, I P Chunchuzov, V G Perepelkin, L Ceranna
The influence of wind velocity and temperature stratification in the upper stratosphere on the waveform of the infrasound signal received at a distance of 2398 km from the epicenter of the powerful explosion in Beirut that occurred on August 4, 2020 is studied using ray trace and pseudo-differential parabolic equation (PDPE) methods. Given a high temporal variability of the wind velocity in the stratopause predicted by the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts model, it is assumed that within the stratopause layer, the increase in effective sound speed with increasing height is very small, on the order of 1 m/s...
July 2022: Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35931538/dependence-of-binaural-gain-for-infrasound-on-interaural-phase-difference
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Marion U Bug, Melina Strüp, Torsten Marquardt
Increasing complaints about infrasound have generated interest in understanding its perception, including binaural effects. This study investigated the level difference between monaural and binaural presentation required for detection and equal loudness (binaural gain) for pure tones with frequencies of 8, 32, and 400 Hz and an 8 Hz sinusoidally amplitude-modulated tone with diotic 400 Hz carrier. Monaural stimuli were compared to binaural stimuli with interaural phase differences (IPDs) of 0°, 90°, and 180° in two experiments: absolute threshold measurements and loudness matching at 40 phons...
July 2022: Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
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