Schlittmeier Sabine J, Feil Alexandra, Liebl Andreas, Hellbr Ck J Rgen
Work, Environmental and Health Psychology, Catholic University of Eichstätt-Ingolstadt, Eichstätt, Germany.
Noise Health. 2015 May-Jun;17(76):148-57. doi: 10.4103/1463-1741.155845.
Little empirical evidence is available regarding the effects of road traffic noise on cognitive performance in adults, although traffic noise can be heard at many offices and home office workplaces. Our study tested the impact of road traffic noise at different levels (50 dB(A), 60 dB(A), 70 dB(A)) on performance in three tasks that differed with respect to their dependency on attentional and storage functions, as follows: The Stroop task, in which performance relied predominantly on attentional functions (e.g., inhibition of automated responses; Experiment 1: n = 24); a non-automated multistage mental arithmetic task calling for both attentional and storage functions (Exp. 2: n = 18); and verbal serial recall, which placed a burden predominantly on storage functions (Experiment 3: n = 18). Better performance was observed during moderate road traffic noise at 50 dB(A) compared to loud traffic noise at 70 dB(A) in attention-based tasks (Experiments 1-2). This contrasted with the effects of irrelevant speech (60 dB(A)), which was included in the experiments as a well-explored and common noise source in office settings. A disturbance impact of background speech was only given in the two tasks that called for storage functions (Experiments 2-3). In addition to the performance data, subjective annoyance ratings were collected. Consistent with the level effect of road traffic noise found in the performance data, a moderate road traffic noise at 50 dB(A) was perceived as significantly less annoying than a loud road traffic noise at 70 dB(A), which was found, however, independently of the task at hand. Furthermore, the background sound condition with the highest detrimental performance effect in a task was also rated as most annoying in this task, i.e., traffic noise at 70 dB(A) in the Stroop task, and background speech in the mental arithmetic and serial recall tasks.
尽管在许多办公室和家庭办公场所都能听到交通噪音,但关于道路交通噪音对成年人认知表现影响的实证证据却很少。我们的研究测试了不同水平(50分贝(A)、60分贝(A)、70分贝(A))的道路交通噪音对三项任务表现的影响,这三项任务在对注意力和存储功能的依赖程度上有所不同,具体如下:斯特鲁普任务,其表现主要依赖于注意力功能(例如,抑制自动反应;实验1:n = 24);一项非自动化的多阶段心算任务,需要注意力和存储功能(实验2:n = 18);以及言语序列回忆,其主要给存储功能带来负担(实验3:n = 18)。在基于注意力的任务(实验1 - 2)中,与70分贝(A)的嘈杂交通噪音相比,在50分贝(A)的适度道路交通噪音下观察到了更好的表现。这与无关言语(60分贝(A))的影响形成对比,无关言语作为办公室环境中一个已被充分研究且常见的噪音源被纳入实验。背景言语的干扰影响仅在两项需要存储功能的任务中出现(实验2 - 3)。除了表现数据外,还收集了主观烦恼评分。与在表现数据中发现的道路交通噪音的水平效应一致,50分贝(A)的适度道路交通噪音被认为比70分贝(A)的嘈杂道路交通噪音明显不那么令人烦恼,然而,这一结果与手头的任务无关。此外,在一项任务中对表现产生最不利影响的背景声音条件在该任务中也被评为最令人烦恼,即斯特鲁普任务中70分贝(A)的交通噪音,以及心算和序列回忆任务中的背景言语。