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      Assessing the changing urban sound environment during the COVID-19 lockdown period using short-term acoustic measurements

        1 ,   1 , 1 , 1 , 1
      Noise Mapping
      Walter de Gruyter GmbH

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          Abstract

          The implementation of lockdown measures due to the COVID-19 outbreak has resulted in wide-ranging social and environmental implications. Among the environmental impacts is a decrease in urban noise levels which has so far been observed at the city scale via noise mapping efforts conducted through the framework of the Environmental Noise Directive. This study aims to understand how lockdown measures have manifested at a local level to better determine how the person-level experience of the urban soundscape has been affected and how these affects differ across urban space typologies. Taking London as a case study, a series of 30-second binaural recordings were taken at 11 locations representing a cross-section of urban public spaces with varying compositions of sound sources during Spring 2019 (pre-lockdown, N = 620) and Spring 2020 (during-lockdown, N = 481). Five acoustic and psychoacoustic metrics ( LA eq , LA 10, LA 90, Loudness, Sharpness) were calculated for each recording and their changes from the pre-lockdown scenario to the lockdown scenario are investigated. Clustering analysis was performed which grouped the locations into 3 types of urban settings based on their acoustic characteristics. An average reduction of 5.4 dB ( LA eq ) was observed, however significant differences in the degree of reduction were found across the locations, ranging from a 10.7 dB to a 1.2 dB reduction. This study confirms the general reduction in noise levels due to the nationally imposed lockdown measures, identifies trends which vary depending on the urban context and discusses the implications for the limits of urban noise reduction.

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          Most cited references25

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          THE APPLICATION OF CLUSTER ANALYSIS IN STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT RESEARCH: AN ANALYSIS AND CRITIQUE

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            COVID-19 as a factor influencing air pollution?

            Highlights • Longer-chain perfluoroalkyl substances strongly inhibited carboxylesterase. • The higher binding affinity caused more severe inhibition. • Inhibition kinetics was studied, and in vitro-in vivo extrapolation was performed.
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              Soundscape and Sound Preferences in Urban Squares: A Case Study in Sheffield

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Noise Mapping
                Walter de Gruyter GmbH
                2084-879X
                January 01 2020
                August 07 2020
                January 01 2020
                January 01 2020
                August 07 2020
                January 01 2020
                : 7
                : 1
                : 123-134
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Institute for Environmental Design and Engineering , University College London , WC1H 0NN London , United Kingdom
                Article
                10.1515/noise-2020-0011
                fd658cb3-e7e5-49e1-b0b1-e529bb3721a4
                © 2020

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0

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