Influence of Ambient Noise in Sound Quality Assessment of Auralised Wind Turbine Noise
J.S. Pockelé (TU Delft - Operations & Environment)
R. Merino Martinez (TU Delft - Operations & Environment)
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Abstract
The influence of ambient noise in the perception of wind turbine noise is evaluated in this exploratory study. For this purpose, experimental field measurements of an NTK wind turbine at different wind speeds and background noise levels are considered. Synthetic wind turbine noise auralizations are then computed to replicate the weather and operational conditions during the experiments. Different background noise recordings were then synthetically added to the simulated auralizations to investigate the effect in sound quality metrics, such as loudness, roughness, or the psychoacoustic annoyance model by Zwicker. A least-squares analysis was applied to the resulting sound signals. It was found that adding background noise to the auralisations notably reduced the differences in metrics between simulations and experiments. However, the behaviour with respect to the A-weighted signal-to-noise ratio then becomes background-noise dependent and, hence, more challenging to predict. Therefore, for perceptual studies, it is recommended to use experimental recordings with low background noise as a ground truth.