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Soundscape

A soundscape is the acoustic environment as perceived by humans, in context. The term was originally coined by Michael Southworth,[1] and popularised by R. Murray Schafer.[2] There is a varied history of the use of soundscape depending on discipline, ranging from urban design to wildlife ecology to computer science.[3] An important distinction is to separate soundscape from the broader acoustic environment. The acoustic environment is the combination of all the acoustic resources, natural and artificial, within a given area as modified by the environment. The International Organization for Standardization (ISO) standardized these definitions in 2014. (ISO 12913-1:2014)

A soundscape is a sound or combination of sounds that forms or arises from an immersive environment. The study of soundscape is the subject of acoustic ecology or soundscape ecology. The idea of soundscape refers to both the natural acoustic environment, consisting of natural sounds, including animal vocalizations, the collective habitat expression of which is now referred to as the biophony, and, for instance, the sounds of weather and other natural elements, now referred to as the geophony; and environmental sounds created by humans, the anthropophony through a sub-set called controlled sound, such as musical composition, sound design, and language, work, and sounds of mechanical origin resulting from use of industrial technology. Crucially, the term soundscape also includes the listener's perception of sounds heard as an environment: "how that environment is understood by those living within it"[4] and therefore mediates their relations. The disruption of these acoustic environments results in noise pollution.[5]

The term "soundscape" can also refer to an audio recording or performance of sounds that create the sensation of experiencing a particular acoustic environment, or compositions created using the found sounds of an acoustic environment, either exclusively or in conjunction with musical performances.[6][7]

Pauline Oliveros, composer of post-World War II electronic art music, defined the term "soundscape" as "All of the waveforms faithfully transmitted to our audio cortex by the ear and its mechanisms".[8]

Historical context edit

The origin of the term soundscape is somewhat ambiguous. It is often miscredited as having been coined by Canadian composer and naturalist, R. Murray Schafer, who indeed led much of the groundbreaking work on the subject from the 1960s and onwards. According to an interview with Schafer published in 2013 [9] Schafer himself attributes the term to city planner Michael Southworth. Southworth, a former student of Kevin Lynch, led a project in Boston in the 1960s, and reported the findings in a paper entitled "The Sonic Environment of Cities", in 1969,[1] where the term is used. To complicate matters, however, a search in Google NGram reveals that soundscape had been used in other publications prior to this. More research is needed to establish the historical background in detail.

Around the same time as Southworth's project in Boston, Schafer initiated the World Soundscape Project together with colleagues like Barry Truax and Hildegard Westerkamp. Schafer subsequently collected the findings from the world soundscape project and fleshed out the soundscape concept in more detail in his seminal work about the sound environment, "Tuning of the World".[10] Schafer has also used the concept in music education.[11]

In music edit

In music, soundscape compositions are often a form of electronic music, or electroacoustic music. Composers who use soundscapes include real-time granular synthesis pioneer Barry Truax, Hildegard Westerkamp, and Luc Ferrari, whose Presque rien, numéro 1 (1970) is an early soundscape composition.[7][12] Soundscape composer Petri Kuljuntausta has created soundscape compositions from the sounds of sky dome and Aurora Borealis and deep sea underwater recordings, and a work entitled "Charm of Sound" to be performed at the extreme environment of Saturn's moon Titan. The work landed on the ground of Titan in 2005 after traveling inside the spacecraft Huygens over seven years and four billion kilometres through space.

Irv Teibel's Environments series (1969–79) consisted of 30-minute, uninterrupted environmental soundscapes and synthesized or processed versions of natural sound.[13]

Music soundscapes can also be generated by automated software methods, such as the experimental TAPESTREA application, a framework for sound design and soundscape composition, and others.[14][15]

The soundscape is often the subject of mimicry in timbre-centered music such as Tuvan throat singing. The process of Timbral Listening is used to interpret the timbre of the soundscape. This timbre is mimicked and reproduced using the voice or rich harmonic producing instruments.[16]

The environment edit

In Schafer's analysis, there are two distinct soundscapes, "hi-fi" and "lo-fi", created by the environment. A hi-fi system possesses a positive signal-to-noise ratio.[17] These settings make it possible for discrete sounds to be heard clearly since there is no background noise to obstruct even the smallest disturbance. A rural landscape offers more hi-fi frequencies than a city because the natural landscape creates an opportunity to hear incidences[spelling?] from nearby and afar. In a lo-fi soundscape, signals are obscured by too many sounds, and perspective is lost within the broad-band of noises.[17] In lo-fi soundscapes everything is very close and compact. A person can only listen to immediate encounters; in most cases even ordinary sounds have to be exuberantly amplified in order to be heard.

All sounds are unique in nature. They occur at one time in one place and cannot be replicated. In fact, it is physically impossible for nature to reproduce any phoneme twice in exactly the same manner.[17]

According to Schafer there are three main elements of the soundscape:

This is a musical term that identifies the key of a piece, not always audible ... the key might stray from the original, but it will return. The keynote sounds may not always be heard consciously, but they "outline the character of the people living there" (Schafer). They are created by nature (geography and climate): wind, water, forests, plains, birds, insects, animals. In many urban areas, traffic has become the keynote sound.
  • Sound signals
These are foreground sounds, which are listened to consciously; examples would be warning devices, bells, whistles, horns, sirens, etc.
  • Soundmark
This is derived from the term landmark. A soundmark is a sound which is unique to an area. In his 1977 book, The Soundscape: Our Sonic Environment and the Tuning of the World, Schafer wrote, "Once a Soundmark has been identified, it deserves to be protected, for soundmarks make the acoustic life of a community unique."[18]

The elements have been further defined as to essential sources:

Bernie Krause, naturalist and soundscape ecologist, redefined the sources of sound in terms of their three main components: geophony, biophony, and anthropophony.[19][20][21]

Consisting of the prefix, geo (gr. earth), and phon (gr. sound), this refers to the soundscape sources that are generated by non-biological natural sources such as wind in the trees, water in a stream or waves at the ocean, and earth movement, the first sounds heard on earth by any sound-sentient organism.
Consisting of the prefix, bio (gr. life) and the suffix for sound, this term refers to all of the non-human, non-domestic biological soundscape sources of sound.
Consisting of the prefix, anthro (gr. human), this term refers to all of the sound signatures generated by humans.

In health care edit

Research has traditionally focused mostly on the negative effects of sound on human beings, as in exposure to environmental noise. Noise has been shown to correlate with health-related problems like stress, reduced sleep and cardiovascular disease.[22] More recently however, it has also been shown that some sounds, like sounds of nature and music, can have positive effects on health,[23][24][25][26][27] some of which might be explained by natural sounds increasing cognitive restoration and feelings of calm, for example.[28] While the negative effects of sound has been widely acknowledged by organizations like EU (END 2002/49) and WHO (Burden of noise disease), the positive effects have as yet received less attention. The positive effects of nature sounds can be acknowledged in everyday planning of urban and rural environments, as well as in specific health treatment situations, like nature-based sound therapy[25] and nature-based rehabilitation.[27]

Soundscapes from a computerized acoustic device with a camera may also offer synthetic vision to the blind, utilizing human echolocation, as is the goal of the seeing with sound project.[29]

Soundscapes and noise pollution edit

Papers on noise pollution are increasingly taking a holistic, soundscape approach to noise control. Whereas acoustics tends to rely on lab measurements and individual acoustic characteristics of cars and so on, soundscape takes a top-down approach. Drawing on John Cage's ideas of the whole world as composition,[citation needed] soundscape researchers investigate people's attitudes to soundscapes as a whole rather than individual aspects – and look at how the entire environment can be changed to be more pleasing to the ear. This body of knowledge approaches the sonic environment subjectively as well, as in how some sounds are tolerated while others disdained, with still others preferred, as seen in Fong's 2016 research comparing the soundscapes of Bangkok, Thailand and Los Angeles, California.[30] To respond to unwanted sounds, however, a typical application of this is the use of masking strategies, as in the use of water features to cover unwanted white noise from traffic. It has been shown that masking can work in some cases, but that the successful outcome is dependent on several factors, like sound pressure levels, orientation of the sources, and character of the water sound.[31][32]

Research has shown that variation is an important factor to consider, as a varied soundscape give people the possibility to seek out their favorite environment depending on preference, mood and other factors.[31] One way to ensure variation is to work with "quiet areas" in urban situations. It has been suggested that people's opportunity to access quiet, natural places in urban areas can be enhanced by improving the ecological quality of urban green spaces through targeted planning and design and that in turn has psychological benefits.[33]

Soundscaping as a method to reducing noise pollution incorporates natural elements rather than just man made elements.[34] Soundscapes can be designed by urban planners and landscape architects. By incorporating knowledge of soundscapes in their work, certain sounds can be enhanced, while others can be reduced or controlled.[35] It has been argued that there are three main ways in which soundscapes can be designed: localization of functions, reduction of unwanted sounds and introduction of wanted sounds,[31] each of which should be considered to ensure a comprehensive approach to soundscape design.

In United States National Parks edit

The National Park Service Natural Sounds and Night Skies Division[36] actively protects the soundscapes and acoustic environments in national parks across the country. It is important[according to whom?] to distinguish and define certain key terms as used by the National Park Service. Acoustic resources are physical sound sources, including both natural sounds (wind, water, wildlife, vegetation) and cultural and historic sounds (battle reenactments, tribal ceremonies, quiet reverence). The acoustic environment is the combination of all the acoustic resources within a given area – natural sounds and human-caused sounds – as modified by the environment. The acoustic environment includes sound vibrations made by geological processes, biological activity, and even sounds that are inaudible to most humans, such as bat echolocation calls. Soundscape is the component of the acoustic environment that can be perceived and comprehended by the humans. The character and quality of the soundscape influence human perceptions of an area, providing a sense of place that differentiates it from other regions. Noise refers to sound which is unwanted, either because of its effects on humans and wildlife, or its interference with the perception or detection of other sounds. Cultural soundscapes include opportunities for appropriate transmission of cultural and historic sounds that are fundamental components of the purposes and values for which the parks were established.

  • Sounds recorded in national parks[37]
  • Yellowstone National Park Sound Library[38]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Southworth, Michael (1969). "The Sonic Environment of Cities". Environment and Behavior. 1 (1): 49–70. doi:10.1177/001391656900100104. hdl:1721.1/102214. S2CID 130685505.
  2. ^ Schafer, R. Murray (1977). The Soundscape: Our Sonic Environment and the Tuning of the World. Alfred Knopf.
  3. ^ Aiello, Luca Maria; Schifanella, Rossano; Quercia, Daniele; Aletta, Francesco (2016). "Chatty maps: constructing sound maps of urban areas from social media data". Royal Society Open Science. 3 (3): 150690. Bibcode:2016RSOS....350690A. doi:10.1098/rsos.150690. PMC 4821272. PMID 27069661.
  4. ^ Truax, Barry (2001). Acoustic Communication. Ablex Publishing Corporation. pp. 11. ISBN 9781567505375.
  5. ^ Krause, Bernie (2016). Voices of the Wild: Human Din, and the Call to Save Natural Soundscapes. Yale University Press. pp. all. ISBN 978-0-30020631-9.
  6. ^ LaBelle, Brandon (2006). Background Noise: Perspectives on Sound Art. Continuum International Publishing Group. pp. 198, 214. ISBN 978-0-8264-1845-6.
  7. ^ a b Truax, Barry (1992). "Electroacoustic Music and the Soundscape: The inner and the Outer World". In Paynter, John (ed.). Companion to Contemporary Musical Thought. Routledge. pp. 374–398. ISBN 978-0-415-07225-0.
  8. ^ Oliveros, Pauline (2005). Deep Listening: A Composer's Sound Practice. iUniverse. p. 18. ISBN 978-0-595-34365-2.
  9. ^ Darò, C (2013). Avant-gardes Sonores en architecture [Avant-garde in sonic architecture]. Dijon: Les Presses du Réel.
  10. ^ Schafer, Murray, R. (1977). The soundscape : our sonic environment and the tuning of the world. Rochester, Vermont: Destiny Books.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  11. ^ Schafer, R.M (1969). The new soundscape: a handbook for the modern music teacher. Toronto: Berandol Music.
  12. ^ Roads, Curtis (2001). Microsound. Cambridge: MIT Press. p. 312. ISBN 978-0-262-18215-7.
  13. ^ Teibel, Irv. "Mother Nature Goes Digital". Atari Archives. Retrieved 18 November 2015.
  14. ^ Boodler ambient soundscape generator written in Python
  15. ^ fLOW ambient soundscape generator (Apple Macintosh)
  16. ^ Levin, Theodore (2006). Where Rivers and Mountains Sing, Sound, Music and Nomadism in Tuva and Beyond. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
  17. ^ a b c Schafer, Murray (2004). Audio Culture: Readings in Modern Music. New York, NY: Continuum International Publishing Group. pp. 29–38.
  18. ^ Schafer, R. Murray (1993). The Soundscape: Our Sonic Environment and the Tuning of the World. Inner Traditions/Bear & Co. p. 10. ISBN 978-089281455-8.
  19. ^ Krause, Bernie (2012). The Great Animal Orchestra: Finding the Origins of Music in the World's Wild Places. Little Brown. p. 278. ISBN 978-0-316-08687-5.
  20. ^ Krause, B (January–February 2008). "The Anatomy of a Soundscape". Journal of the Audio Engineering Society. 56 (1/2).
  21. ^ Pijanowski, Bryan C.; Villanueva-Rivera, Luis J.; Dumyahn, Sarah L.; Farina, Almo; Krause, Bernie; Napoletano, Brian M.; Gage, Stuart H.; Pieretti, Nadia (March 2011). "Soundscape Ecology: The Science of Sound in the Landscape". BioScience. 61 (3): 203–216. doi:10.1525/bio.2011.61.3.6.
  22. ^ Basner, M., Babisch, W., Davis, A., Brink, M., Clark, C., Janssen, S. & Stansfeld, S. (2014). "Auditory and non-auditory effects of noise on health". Lancet. 383 (9925): 1325–1332. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(13)61613-X. PMC 3988259. PMID 24183105.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  23. ^ Alvarsson, J.J., Wiens, S. & Nilsson, M.E (2010). "Stress Recovery during Exposure to Nature Sound and Environmental Noise". International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 7 (3): 1036–1046. doi:10.3390/ijerph7031036. PMC 2872309. PMID 20617017.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  24. ^ Annerstedt, M., Jonsson, P., Wallergard, M., Johansson, G., Karlson, B., Grahn, P., Hansen, A.M. & Wahrborg, P.. (2013). "Inducing physiological stress recovery with sounds of nature in a virtual reality forest - Results from a pilot study". Physiology & Behavior. 118: 240–250. doi:10.1016/j.physbeh.2013.05.023. PMID 23688947. S2CID 4826491.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  25. ^ a b Saadatmand, V., Rejeh, N., Heravi-Karimooi, M., Tadrisi, S.D., Zayeri, F., Vaismoradi, M. & Jasper, M. (2013). "Effect of nature-based sounds' intervention on agitation, anxiety, and stress in patients under mechanical ventilator support: A randomised controlled trial". International Journal of Nursing Studies. 50 (7): 895–904. doi:10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2012.11.018. PMID 23245705.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  26. ^ Hägerhäll, C., Taylor, R., Cerwén, G., Watts, G., Van den Bosch, M., Press, D. & Minta, S. (2018). Biological mechanisms and neurophysiological responses to sensory impact from nature.In: Van den Bosch & M.Bird, W. (eds.) Oxford Textbook of Nature and Public Health. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Oxford: Oxford University Press.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  27. ^ a b Cerwén, G., Pedersen, E. & Pálsdóttir (2016). "The role of soundscape in nature-based rehabilitation: A patient perspective". International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 13 (12): 1229. doi:10.3390/ijerph13121229. PMC 5201370. PMID 27973437.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  28. ^ Smalley, A. J., White, M. P., Sandiford, R., Desai, N., Watson, C., Smalley, N., Tuppen, J., Sakka, L., Fleming, L. E. (1 August 2023). "Soundscapes, music, and memories: Exploring the factors that influence emotional responses to virtual nature content". Journal of Environmental Psychology. 89: 102060. doi:10.1016/j.jenvp.2023.102060. ISSN 0272-4944.
  29. ^ Seeing with Sound
  30. ^ Fong, Jack (2016). "Making Operative Concepts from Murray Schafer's Soundscapes Typology: A Qualitative and Comparative Analysis of Noise Pollution in Bangkok, Thailand and Los Angeles, California". Urban Studies. 53 (1): 173-192. doi:10.1177/0042098014562333. S2CID 30362727.
  31. ^ a b c Cerwén, Gunnar (2017). Sound in Landscape Architecture: A Soundscape Approach to Noise. Alnarp: SLU. ISBN 978-91-7760-073-2.
  32. ^ Rådsten Ekman, Maria (2015). Unwanted Wanted Sounds: Perception of Sounds from Water Structures. Stockholm: Stockholm University.
  33. ^ Irvine, K. N.; Devine-Wright, P.; Payne, S. R.; Fuller, R. A.; Painter, B.; Gaston, K. J. (2009). "Green space, soundscape and urban sustainability: An interdisciplinary, empirical study". Local Environment. 14 (2): 155. doi:10.1080/13549830802522061. S2CID 55692349.
  34. ^ "Soundscaping | Sound Control". soundcontroltech.com. Retrieved 2017-04-19.
  35. ^ Brown, Lex (2004). "An approach to the acoustic design of outdoor space". Journal of Environmental Planning and Management. 47 (6): 827–842. doi:10.1080/0964056042000284857. hdl:10072/5197. S2CID 55857646.
  36. ^ National Park Service Natural Sounds and Night Skies Division
  37. ^ Sounds recorded in national parks
  38. ^ Yellowstone National Park Sound Library

Further reading edit

  • 1969 The New Soundscape - R. Murray Schafer
  • 1974 Soundscape studies: An introduction to the World Soundscape Project. Truax, B. Numus-West, 5, pp. 36–39.
  • 1977 The Tuning of the World - R. Murray Schafer (ISBN 0-394-40966-3)
    These 2 works were adapted to become part of the 1993 book, The Soundscape: Our Sonic Environment and the Tuning of the World - R. Murray Schafer (ISBN 0-89281-455-1) 1977 Five village soundscapes (Music of the environment series) - A.R.C. Publications (ISBN 0-88985-005-4)
  • 1978 Handbook for Acoustic Ecology - Barry Truax (ISBN 0-88985-011-9)
  • 1985 Acoustic Communication : Second Edition - Barry Truax & World Soundscape Project (ISBN 1-56750-537-6
  • 1994 Soundscapes: Essays on Vroom and Moo, Eds: Jarviluoma, Helmi - Department of Folk Tradition
  • 2002/2016 Wild Soundscapes: Discovering the Voice of the Natural World - Bernie Krause (Yale University Press, ISBN 0300218192) - book & QR link to audio
  • 2002 Linking Soundscape Composition and Acoustic Ecology - Hildegard Westerkamp:
  • 2003 Site Soundscapes: Landscape architecture in the light of sound - Sonotope Design Strategies, Per Hedfors (Diss.: ISSN 1401-6249 ISBN 91-576-6425-0 Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences. Diss. summary: ISBN 978-3-639-09413-8
  • 2004 "Voicescapes: The (en)chanting voice & its performance soundscapes" in Soundscape: The Journal of Acoustic Ecology Vol.5 No.2 - Henry Johnson 26-29 ISSN 1607-3304
  • 2004 The Auditory Culture Reader (Sensory Formations) - Michael Bull (ISBN 1-85973-618-1)
  • 2005 "Acoustic Ecology Considered as a Connotation: Semiotic, Post-Colonial and Educational Views of Soundscape" in Soundscape: The Journal of Acoustic Ecology Vol.6 No.2 - Tadahiko Imada 13-17 (ISSN 1607-3304)
  • 2006 Qualitative Judgements of Urban Soundscapes: Questionning [sic] Questionnaires and Semantic Scales - Raimbault, Manon, Acta Acustica united with Acustica 92(6), 929–937
  • . Lo Squaderno (10). December 2008. ISSN 1973-9141. Archived from the original on 2009-07-26. Retrieved 2009-03-14.
  • 2006, "Gebiete, Schichten und Klanglandschaften in den Alpen. Zum Gebrauch einiger historischer Begriffe aus der Musikethnologie", Marcello Sorce Keller, in T. Nussbaumer (ed.), Volksmusik in den Alpen: Interkulturelle Horizonte und Crossovers, Salzburg, Verlag Mueller-Speiser, 2006, pp. 9–18.
  • 2006 The West Meets the East in Acoustic Ecology (Tadahiko Imada Kozo Hiramatsu et al. Eds), Japanese Association for Sound Ecology & Hirosaki University International Music Centre ISBN 4-9903332-1-7
  • 2008 "Soundscape, postcolonial and music education: Experiencing the earliest grain of the body and music" - Tadahiko Imada in Music Education Policy and Implementation: International Perspectives (Chi Cheung Leung, Lai Chi Rita Yip and Tadahiko Imada Eds, Hirosaki University Press) ISBN 978-4-902774-39-9
  • 2009 A Little Sound Education - R. Murray Schafer & Tadahiko Imada (Shunjusha, Tokyo) ISBN 978-4-393-93539-2
  • 2012 The Great Animal Orchestra: Finding the Origins of Music in the World's Wild Places, Bernie Krause, Little Brown New York, ISBN 978-0-316-08687-5
  • 2015 Voices of the Wild: Animal Songs, Human Din, and the Call to Save Natural Soundscapes - Bernie Krause (Yale University Press, ISBN 978-0-300-20631-9) - book & links to audio examples
  • 2016 Acoustic Competence: Investigating sonic empowerment in urban cultures. Berlin / Johannesburg - Felix Urban (Marburg: Tectum Verlag) ISBN 978-3-8288-3683-9
  • 2016 Fong, Jack "Making Operative Concepts from Murray Schafer's Soundscapes Typology: A Qualitative and Comparative Analysis of Noise Pollution in Bangkok, Thailand and Los Angeles, California." Urban Studies 53(1):173-192.
  • 2016 Soundscape and the Built Environment. Kang, J. & Schulte-Fortkamp, B. (eds.) (2016). Boca Raton: Taylor & Francis Group.
  • 2016 Chatty maps: constructing sound maps of urban areas from social media data. Luca Maria Aiello, Rossano Schifanella, Daniele Quercia, Francesco Aletta (2016). Royal Society Open Science.
  • 2017 Sound in Landscape Architecture: A Soundscape Approach to Noise. Cerwén, G. Alnarp: SLU ISBN 978-91-7760-073-2

External links edit

  • World Forum for Acoustic Ecology (WFAE)
  • , published by WFAE
  • How Sound Affects Us (8:18)—TED talk by Julian Treasure
  • Napolisoundscape Urban Space Research Web archive of the audio mapping of the city of Naples
  • SonorCities: Learning Culture through City Soundscapes – An Educational Tool

soundscape, study, acoustic, relationships, ecology, sound, card, brand, ensoniq, cedar, walton, album, album, this, article, possibly, contains, original, research, please, improve, verifying, claims, made, adding, inline, citations, statements, consisting, o. For the study of the acoustic relationships see Soundscape ecology For the PC sound card brand see Ensoniq Soundscape For the Cedar Walton album see Soundscapes album This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed July 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message A soundscape is the acoustic environment as perceived by humans in context The term was originally coined by Michael Southworth 1 and popularised by R Murray Schafer 2 There is a varied history of the use of soundscape depending on discipline ranging from urban design to wildlife ecology to computer science 3 An important distinction is to separate soundscape from the broader acoustic environment The acoustic environment is the combination of all the acoustic resources natural and artificial within a given area as modified by the environment The International Organization for Standardization ISO standardized these definitions in 2014 ISO 12913 1 2014 A soundscape is a sound or combination of sounds that forms or arises from an immersive environment The study of soundscape is the subject of acoustic ecology or soundscape ecology The idea of soundscape refers to both the natural acoustic environment consisting of natural sounds including animal vocalizations the collective habitat expression of which is now referred to as the biophony and for instance the sounds of weather and other natural elements now referred to as the geophony and environmental sounds created by humans the anthropophony through a sub set called controlled sound such as musical composition sound design and language work and sounds of mechanical origin resulting from use of industrial technology Crucially the term soundscape also includes the listener s perception of sounds heard as an environment how that environment is understood by those living within it 4 and therefore mediates their relations The disruption of these acoustic environments results in noise pollution 5 The term soundscape can also refer to an audio recording or performance of sounds that create the sensation of experiencing a particular acoustic environment or compositions created using the found sounds of an acoustic environment either exclusively or in conjunction with musical performances 6 7 Pauline Oliveros composer of post World War II electronic art music defined the term soundscape as All of the waveforms faithfully transmitted to our audio cortex by the ear and its mechanisms 8 Soundscape from Puerto Rico source source Shared by El Cloquido Problems playing this file See media help Contents 1 Historical context 2 In music 3 The environment 4 In health care 5 Soundscapes and noise pollution 6 In United States National Parks 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistorical context editThe origin of the term soundscape is somewhat ambiguous It is often miscredited as having been coined by Canadian composer and naturalist R Murray Schafer who indeed led much of the groundbreaking work on the subject from the 1960s and onwards According to an interview with Schafer published in 2013 9 Schafer himself attributes the term to city planner Michael Southworth Southworth a former student of Kevin Lynch led a project in Boston in the 1960s and reported the findings in a paper entitled The Sonic Environment of Cities in 1969 1 where the term is used To complicate matters however a search in Google NGram reveals that soundscape had been used in other publications prior to this More research is needed to establish the historical background in detail Around the same time as Southworth s project in Boston Schafer initiated the World Soundscape Project together with colleagues like Barry Truax and Hildegard Westerkamp Schafer subsequently collected the findings from the world soundscape project and fleshed out the soundscape concept in more detail in his seminal work about the sound environment Tuning of the World 10 Schafer has also used the concept in music education 11 In music editIn music soundscape compositions are often a form of electronic music or electroacoustic music Composers who use soundscapes include real time granular synthesis pioneer Barry Truax Hildegard Westerkamp and Luc Ferrari whose Presque rien numero 1 1970 is an early soundscape composition 7 12 Soundscape composer Petri Kuljuntausta has created soundscape compositions from the sounds of sky dome and Aurora Borealis and deep sea underwater recordings and a work entitled Charm of Sound to be performed at the extreme environment of Saturn s moon Titan The work landed on the ground of Titan in 2005 after traveling inside the spacecraft Huygens over seven years and four billion kilometres through space Irv Teibel s Environments series 1969 79 consisted of 30 minute uninterrupted environmental soundscapes and synthesized or processed versions of natural sound 13 Music soundscapes can also be generated by automated software methods such as the experimental TAPESTREA application a framework for sound design and soundscape composition and others 14 15 The soundscape is often the subject of mimicry in timbre centered music such as Tuvan throat singing The process of Timbral Listening is used to interpret the timbre of the soundscape This timbre is mimicked and reproduced using the voice or rich harmonic producing instruments 16 The environment editIn Schafer s analysis there are two distinct soundscapes hi fi and lo fi created by the environment A hi fi system possesses a positive signal to noise ratio 17 These settings make it possible for discrete sounds to be heard clearly since there is no background noise to obstruct even the smallest disturbance A rural landscape offers more hi fi frequencies than a city because the natural landscape creates an opportunity to hear incidences spelling from nearby and afar In a lo fi soundscape signals are obscured by too many sounds and perspective is lost within the broad band of noises 17 In lo fi soundscapes everything is very close and compact A person can only listen to immediate encounters in most cases even ordinary sounds have to be exuberantly amplified in order to be heard All sounds are unique in nature They occur at one time in one place and cannot be replicated In fact it is physically impossible for nature to reproduce any phoneme twice in exactly the same manner 17 According to Schafer there are three main elements of the soundscape Keynote sounds This is a musical term that identifies the key of a piece not always audible the key might stray from the original but it will return The keynote sounds may not always be heard consciously but they outline the character of the people living there Schafer They are created by nature geography and climate wind water forests plains birds insects animals In many urban areas traffic has become the keynote sound Sound signals These are foreground sounds which are listened to consciously examples would be warning devices bells whistles horns sirens etc Soundmark This is derived from the term landmark A soundmark is a sound which is unique to an area In his 1977 book The Soundscape Our Sonic Environment and the Tuning of the World Schafer wrote Once a Soundmark has been identified it deserves to be protected for soundmarks make the acoustic life of a community unique 18 The elements have been further defined as to essential sources Bernie Krause naturalist and soundscape ecologist redefined the sources of sound in terms of their three main components geophony biophony and anthropophony 19 20 21 Geophony Consisting of the prefix geo gr earth and phon gr sound this refers to the soundscape sources that are generated by non biological natural sources such as wind in the trees water in a stream or waves at the ocean and earth movement the first sounds heard on earth by any sound sentient organism Biophony Consisting of the prefix bio gr life and the suffix for sound this term refers to all of the non human non domestic biological soundscape sources of sound Anthropophony Consisting of the prefix anthro gr human this term refers to all of the sound signatures generated by humans In health care editResearch has traditionally focused mostly on the negative effects of sound on human beings as in exposure to environmental noise Noise has been shown to correlate with health related problems like stress reduced sleep and cardiovascular disease 22 More recently however it has also been shown that some sounds like sounds of nature and music can have positive effects on health 23 24 25 26 27 some of which might be explained by natural sounds increasing cognitive restoration and feelings of calm for example 28 While the negative effects of sound has been widely acknowledged by organizations like EU END 2002 49 and WHO Burden of noise disease the positive effects have as yet received less attention The positive effects of nature sounds can be acknowledged in everyday planning of urban and rural environments as well as in specific health treatment situations like nature based sound therapy 25 and nature based rehabilitation 27 Soundscapes from a computerized acoustic device with a camera may also offer synthetic vision to the blind utilizing human echolocation as is the goal of the seeing with sound project 29 Soundscapes and noise pollution editPapers on noise pollution are increasingly taking a holistic soundscape approach to noise control Whereas acoustics tends to rely on lab measurements and individual acoustic characteristics of cars and so on soundscape takes a top down approach Drawing on John Cage s ideas of the whole world as composition citation needed soundscape researchers investigate people s attitudes to soundscapes as a whole rather than individual aspects and look at how the entire environment can be changed to be more pleasing to the ear This body of knowledge approaches the sonic environment subjectively as well as in how some sounds are tolerated while others disdained with still others preferred as seen in Fong s 2016 research comparing the soundscapes of Bangkok Thailand and Los Angeles California 30 To respond to unwanted sounds however a typical application of this is the use of masking strategies as in the use of water features to cover unwanted white noise from traffic It has been shown that masking can work in some cases but that the successful outcome is dependent on several factors like sound pressure levels orientation of the sources and character of the water sound 31 32 Research has shown that variation is an important factor to consider as a varied soundscape give people the possibility to seek out their favorite environment depending on preference mood and other factors 31 One way to ensure variation is to work with quiet areas in urban situations It has been suggested that people s opportunity to access quiet natural places in urban areas can be enhanced by improving the ecological quality of urban green spaces through targeted planning and design and that in turn has psychological benefits 33 Soundscaping as a method to reducing noise pollution incorporates natural elements rather than just man made elements 34 Soundscapes can be designed by urban planners and landscape architects By incorporating knowledge of soundscapes in their work certain sounds can be enhanced while others can be reduced or controlled 35 It has been argued that there are three main ways in which soundscapes can be designed localization of functions reduction of unwanted sounds and introduction of wanted sounds 31 each of which should be considered to ensure a comprehensive approach to soundscape design In United States National Parks editThe National Park Service Natural Sounds and Night Skies Division 36 actively protects the soundscapes and acoustic environments in national parks across the country It is important according to whom to distinguish and define certain key terms as used by the National Park Service Acoustic resources are physical sound sources including both natural sounds wind water wildlife vegetation and cultural and historic sounds battle reenactments tribal ceremonies quiet reverence The acoustic environment is the combination of all the acoustic resources within a given area natural sounds and human caused sounds as modified by the environment The acoustic environment includes sound vibrations made by geological processes biological activity and even sounds that are inaudible to most humans such as bat echolocation calls Soundscape is the component of the acoustic environment that can be perceived and comprehended by the humans The character and quality of the soundscape influence human perceptions of an area providing a sense of place that differentiates it from other regions Noise refers to sound which is unwanted either because of its effects on humans and wildlife or its interference with the perception or detection of other sounds Cultural soundscapes include opportunities for appropriate transmission of cultural and historic sounds that are fundamental components of the purposes and values for which the parks were established Sounds recorded in national parks 37 Yellowstone National Park Sound Library 38 See also editAmbient music Anthropophony Biomusic Biophony Ecoacoustics Environments series Field recording Geophony Musique concrete Noise map Program music Sharawadji effect Sound art Sound installation Sound map Sound sculpture Soundscape ecology Space music Underwater acousticsReferences edit a b Southworth Michael 1969 The Sonic Environment of Cities Environment and Behavior 1 1 49 70 doi 10 1177 001391656900100104 hdl 1721 1 102214 S2CID 130685505 Schafer R Murray 1977 The Soundscape Our Sonic Environment and the Tuning of the World Alfred Knopf Aiello Luca Maria Schifanella Rossano Quercia Daniele Aletta Francesco 2016 Chatty maps constructing sound maps of urban areas from social media data Royal Society Open Science 3 3 150690 Bibcode 2016RSOS 350690A doi 10 1098 rsos 150690 PMC 4821272 PMID 27069661 Truax Barry 2001 Acoustic Communication Ablex Publishing Corporation pp 11 ISBN 9781567505375 Krause Bernie 2016 Voices of the Wild Human Din and the Call to Save Natural Soundscapes Yale University Press pp all ISBN 978 0 30020631 9 LaBelle Brandon 2006 Background Noise Perspectives on Sound Art Continuum International Publishing Group pp 198 214 ISBN 978 0 8264 1845 6 a b Truax Barry 1992 Electroacoustic Music and the Soundscape The inner and the Outer World In Paynter John ed Companion to Contemporary Musical Thought Routledge pp 374 398 ISBN 978 0 415 07225 0 Oliveros Pauline 2005 Deep Listening A Composer s Sound Practice iUniverse p 18 ISBN 978 0 595 34365 2 Daro C 2013 Avant gardes Sonores en architecture Avant garde in sonic architecture Dijon Les Presses du Reel Schafer Murray R 1977 The soundscape our sonic environment and the tuning of the world Rochester Vermont Destiny Books a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Schafer R M 1969 The new soundscape a handbook for the modern music teacher Toronto Berandol Music Roads Curtis 2001 Microsound Cambridge MIT Press p 312 ISBN 978 0 262 18215 7 Teibel Irv Mother Nature Goes Digital Atari Archives Retrieved 18 November 2015 Boodler ambient soundscape generator written in Python fLOW ambient soundscape generator Apple Macintosh Levin Theodore 2006 Where Rivers and Mountains Sing Sound Music and Nomadism in Tuva and Beyond Bloomington Indiana University Press a b c Schafer Murray 2004 Audio Culture Readings in Modern Music New York NY Continuum International Publishing Group pp 29 38 Schafer R Murray 1993 The Soundscape Our Sonic Environment and the Tuning of the World Inner Traditions Bear amp Co p 10 ISBN 978 089281455 8 Krause Bernie 2012 The Great Animal Orchestra Finding the Origins of Music in the World s Wild Places Little Brown p 278 ISBN 978 0 316 08687 5 Krause B January February 2008 The Anatomy of a Soundscape Journal of the Audio Engineering Society 56 1 2 Pijanowski Bryan C Villanueva Rivera Luis J Dumyahn Sarah L Farina Almo Krause Bernie Napoletano Brian M Gage Stuart H Pieretti Nadia March 2011 Soundscape Ecology The Science of Sound in the Landscape BioScience 61 3 203 216 doi 10 1525 bio 2011 61 3 6 Basner M Babisch W Davis A Brink M Clark C Janssen S amp Stansfeld S 2014 Auditory and non auditory effects of noise on health Lancet 383 9925 1325 1332 doi 10 1016 S0140 6736 13 61613 X PMC 3988259 PMID 24183105 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Alvarsson J J Wiens S amp Nilsson M E 2010 Stress Recovery during Exposure to Nature Sound and Environmental Noise International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 7 3 1036 1046 doi 10 3390 ijerph7031036 PMC 2872309 PMID 20617017 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Annerstedt M Jonsson P Wallergard M Johansson G Karlson B Grahn P Hansen A M amp Wahrborg P 2013 Inducing physiological stress recovery with sounds of nature in a virtual reality forest Results from a pilot study Physiology amp Behavior 118 240 250 doi 10 1016 j physbeh 2013 05 023 PMID 23688947 S2CID 4826491 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b Saadatmand V Rejeh N Heravi Karimooi M Tadrisi S D Zayeri F Vaismoradi M amp Jasper M 2013 Effect of nature based sounds intervention on agitation anxiety and stress in patients under mechanical ventilator support A randomised controlled trial International Journal of Nursing Studies 50 7 895 904 doi 10 1016 j ijnurstu 2012 11 018 PMID 23245705 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Hagerhall C Taylor R Cerwen G Watts G Van den Bosch M Press D amp Minta S 2018 Biological mechanisms and neurophysiological responses to sensory impact from nature In Van den Bosch amp M Bird W eds Oxford Textbook of Nature and Public Health Oxford Oxford University Press Oxford Oxford University Press a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b Cerwen G Pedersen E amp Palsdottir 2016 The role of soundscape in nature based rehabilitation A patient perspective International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 13 12 1229 doi 10 3390 ijerph13121229 PMC 5201370 PMID 27973437 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Smalley A J White M P Sandiford R Desai N Watson C Smalley N Tuppen J Sakka L Fleming L E 1 August 2023 Soundscapes music and memories Exploring the factors that influence emotional responses to virtual nature content Journal of Environmental Psychology 89 102060 doi 10 1016 j jenvp 2023 102060 ISSN 0272 4944 Seeing with Sound Fong Jack 2016 Making Operative Concepts from Murray Schafer s Soundscapes Typology A Qualitative and Comparative Analysis of Noise Pollution in Bangkok Thailand and Los Angeles California Urban Studies 53 1 173 192 doi 10 1177 0042098014562333 S2CID 30362727 a b c Cerwen Gunnar 2017 Sound in Landscape Architecture A Soundscape Approach to Noise Alnarp SLU ISBN 978 91 7760 073 2 Radsten Ekman Maria 2015 Unwanted Wanted Sounds Perception of Sounds from Water Structures Stockholm Stockholm University Irvine K N Devine Wright P Payne S R Fuller R A Painter B Gaston K J 2009 Green space soundscape and urban sustainability An interdisciplinary empirical study Local Environment 14 2 155 doi 10 1080 13549830802522061 S2CID 55692349 Soundscaping Sound Control soundcontroltech com Retrieved 2017 04 19 Brown Lex 2004 An approach to the acoustic design of outdoor space Journal of Environmental Planning and Management 47 6 827 842 doi 10 1080 0964056042000284857 hdl 10072 5197 S2CID 55857646 National Park Service Natural Sounds and Night Skies Division Sounds recorded in national parks Yellowstone National Park Sound LibraryFurther reading edit1969 The New Soundscape R Murray Schafer 1974 Soundscape studies An introduction to the World Soundscape Project Truax B Numus West 5 pp 36 39 1977 The Tuning of the World R Murray Schafer ISBN 0 394 40966 3 These 2 works were adapted to become part of the 1993 book The Soundscape Our Sonic Environment and the Tuning of the World R Murray Schafer ISBN 0 89281 455 1 1977 Five village soundscapes Music of the environment series A R C Publications ISBN 0 88985 005 4 1978 Handbook for Acoustic Ecology Barry Truax ISBN 0 88985 011 9 1985 Acoustic Communication Second Edition Barry Truax amp World Soundscape Project ISBN 1 56750 537 6 1994 Soundscapes Essays on Vroom and Moo Eds Jarviluoma Helmi Department of Folk Tradition 2002 2016 Wild Soundscapes Discovering the Voice of the Natural World Bernie Krause Yale University Press ISBN 0300218192 book amp QR link to audio 2002 Linking Soundscape Composition and Acoustic Ecology Hildegard Westerkamp 2003 Site Soundscapes Landscape architecture in the light of sound Sonotope Design Strategies Per Hedfors Diss ISSN 1401 6249 ISBN 91 576 6425 0 1 Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences Diss summary ISBN 978 3 639 09413 8 2004 Voicescapes The en chanting voice amp its performance soundscapes in Soundscape The Journal of Acoustic Ecology Vol 5 No 2 Henry Johnson 26 29 ISSN 1607 3304 2004 The Auditory Culture Reader Sensory Formations Michael Bull ISBN 1 85973 618 1 2005 Acoustic Ecology Considered as a Connotation Semiotic Post Colonial and Educational Views of Soundscape in Soundscape The Journal of Acoustic Ecology Vol 6 No 2 Tadahiko Imada 13 17 ISSN 1607 3304 2006 Qualitative Judgements of Urban Soundscapes Questionning sic Questionnaires and Semantic Scales Raimbault Manon Acta Acustica united with Acustica 92 6 929 937 Soundscapes Paesaggi sonori Lo Squaderno 10 December 2008 ISSN 1973 9141 Archived from the original on 2009 07 26 Retrieved 2009 03 14 2006 Gebiete Schichten und Klanglandschaften in den Alpen Zum Gebrauch einiger historischer Begriffe aus der Musikethnologie Marcello Sorce Keller in T Nussbaumer ed Volksmusik in den Alpen Interkulturelle Horizonte und Crossovers Salzburg Verlag Mueller Speiser 2006 pp 9 18 2006 The West Meets the East in Acoustic Ecology Tadahiko Imada Kozo Hiramatsu et al Eds Japanese Association for Sound Ecology amp Hirosaki University International Music Centre ISBN 4 9903332 1 7 2008 Soundscape postcolonial and music education Experiencing the earliest grain of the body and music Tadahiko Imada in Music Education Policy and Implementation International Perspectives Chi Cheung Leung Lai Chi Rita Yip and Tadahiko Imada Eds Hirosaki University Press ISBN 978 4 902774 39 9 2009 A Little Sound Education R Murray Schafer amp Tadahiko Imada Shunjusha Tokyo ISBN 978 4 393 93539 2 2012 The Great Animal Orchestra Finding the Origins of Music in the World s Wild Places Bernie Krause Little Brown New York ISBN 978 0 316 08687 5 2015 Voices of the Wild Animal Songs Human Din and the Call to Save Natural Soundscapes Bernie Krause Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 20631 9 book amp links to audio examples 2016 Acoustic Competence Investigating sonic empowerment in urban cultures Berlin Johannesburg Felix Urban Marburg Tectum Verlag ISBN 978 3 8288 3683 9 2016 Fong Jack Making Operative Concepts from Murray Schafer s Soundscapes Typology A Qualitative and Comparative Analysis of Noise Pollution in Bangkok Thailand and Los Angeles California Urban Studies 53 1 173 192 2016 Soundscape and the Built Environment Kang J amp Schulte Fortkamp B eds 2016 Boca Raton Taylor amp Francis Group 2016 Chatty maps constructing sound maps of urban areas from social media data Luca Maria Aiello Rossano Schifanella Daniele Quercia Francesco Aletta 2016 Royal Society Open Science 2017 Sound in Landscape Architecture A Soundscape Approach to Noise Cerwen G Alnarp SLU ISBN 978 91 7760 073 2External links editWorld Forum for Acoustic Ecology WFAE Soundscape The Journal of Acoustic Ecology published by WFAE How Sound Affects Us 8 18 TED talk by Julian Treasure Napolisoundscape Urban Space Research Web archive of the audio mapping of the city of Naples SonorCities Learning Culture through City Soundscapes An Educational Tool Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Soundscape amp oldid 1223011438, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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