Sunday, March 29, 2026
ADVT 
Interesting

Now, A 'Friendly' Car Horn That Alerts Without Jarring

Darpan News Desk, 07 Jul, 2017 01:02 PM
    A team of researchers has come up with a car horn that alerts people to danger while reducing the cacophony on city streets.
     
     
    The study, led by Myungjin Bae of Soongsil University in Seoul, Korea, and presented at the Acoustics '17 Boston meeting by SangHwi Jee, introduced a new pedestrian-friendly car-horn sound identified through the Mean Option Score (MOS).
     
     
    The MOS is a simple ranking method commonly used to evaluate machine speech, sounds and noise. Test listeners used MOS to evaluate candidate horn sounds based on five different perceptual qualities such as stress and loudness. It ranks sounds on a scale from bad to excellent.
     
     
    "The sound of Klaxon heard outside the car of the driver is uncomfortable because it is too loud to the people around him," Bae said. "In our study we used the existing historic Klaxon sound source, but made some modification concerning its volume and rhythm with duration time by adding a power controller. Our new Klaxon sound can immediately alert the pedestrians of the danger while also reducing the unpleasantness and stress of the sound."
     
     
     
     
    The historic standard car horn sound is familiar: It's the trademark-named Klaxon car horn developed in 1908, the classic "ah-oo-gah" sounding horn.
     
     
    To test the perceptual effects of their new horn sounds, researchers exposed 100 volunteers to a menu of sounds in hopes of finding those that were less irritating to the ear of pedestrians.
     
     
    "For almost 100 years, the car Klaxon sound was almost invisible and its design was simple, and it had the advantage of being able to make a loud noise at low power. But the level of loudness could not be easily controlled. In this study, when a driver presses a Klaxon, a loud sound of 110dB or more is not transmitted directly to a pedestrian," Bae said.
     
     
    The intended result is a calmer more peaceful environment, he said, attributes that increase a driver's focus and rational response. The selected sound can be applied to any motor vehicle. Its advantage is that it reduces stress on drivers as well as pedestrians or bikers, thus improving the city soundscape

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Language of emotion is vague

    Language of emotion is vague
    A researcher from the University of California - Santa Barbara has found that definition of emotions such as shame and pride have remained vague as our...

    Language of emotion is vague

    A bullet that changes direction in mid-air

    A bullet that changes direction in mid-air
    The Extreme Accuracy Tasked Ordnance (EXACTO), currently being tested by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), is a .50 calibre...

    A bullet that changes direction in mid-air

    B.C. Report Says Closed-minded Government Probe Led To Health Workers' Firings

    B.C. Report Says Closed-minded Government Probe Led To Health Workers' Firings
    VICTORIA — A B.C. government investigation that prompted the firings or suspensions of seven health researchers failed to follow existing procedures and reached premature conclusions, a labour lawyer says.

    B.C. Report Says Closed-minded Government Probe Led To Health Workers' Firings

    Bikini Round Now Removed From Miss World Pageant

    Bikini Round Now Removed From Miss World Pageant
    The Miss World contest, which has been an annual feature since 1951, will no longer feature a swimsuit round in their competition, the organisation's chairwoman Julia Morley has said.

    Bikini Round Now Removed From Miss World Pageant

    Calorie Labels For Alcoholic Drinks Will Be On The Menu - But Not At The Bar

    Calorie Labels For Alcoholic Drinks Will Be On The Menu - But Not At The Bar
    WASHINGTON — Don't want to be confronted with the number of calories in that margarita or craft beer? Then avoid the menu and order at the bar.

    Calorie Labels For Alcoholic Drinks Will Be On The Menu - But Not At The Bar

    Microbial 'signatures' can nab sexual offenders

    Microbial 'signatures' can nab sexual offenders
    Bacterial communities living on an individual's pubic hairs could be used as a microbial "signature" to trace his involvement in sexual assault cases, say Australian researchers....

    Microbial 'signatures' can nab sexual offenders