Human response to environmental noise: The role of perceived control


Autoria(s): Hatfield, Julie; Job, R.F. Soames; Hede, Andrew J.; Carter, Norman L.; Peploe, Peter; Taylor, Richard; Morrell, Stephen
Data(s)

01/12/2002

Resumo

Negative impacts of noise exposure on health and performance may result in part from learned helplessness, the syndrome of deficits typically produced by exposure to uncontrollable events. People may perceive environmental noise to be uncontrollable, and several effects of noise exposure appear to parallel learned helplessness deficits. In the present socioacoustic survey (N = 1,015), perceived control over aircraft noise correlated negatively with some effects of noise (though not others). Furthermore, these effects were better predicted by perceived control than by noise level. These observational data support the claim that learned helplessness contributes to the effects of noise exposure.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:38719

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Lawrence Erlbaum Assoc Inc

Palavras-Chave #Psychology, Clinical #Learned Helplessness #Uncontrollability #Noise Disturbance #Sleep Disturbance #Effects Of Noise #Road Traffic Noise #Aircraft Noise #Mental-health #Animal-models #Sleep #Performance #Stress #Depression #Behavior #Disturbance #11 Medical and Health Sciences #1117 Public Health and Health Services
Tipo

Journal Article