This blog contains lots of articles and world news. Its aim is to be a source of knowledge for people to read and think, and thus make an intuitive decision on how to lead their lives fruitfully in every-day livings.Under the concept of Today-Readers are Tomorrow Leaders.' The world will be better because we begin to change for the best.
วันจันทร์ที่ 16 กุมภาพันธ์ พ.ศ. 2558
Noise pollution is making us oblivious to the sound of nature, says researcher
Gift of hearing birdsong and trickling water is being lost to a
process of ‘learned deafness’, says US scientist, as people screen out
background noise
Yosemite national park in California where noise pollution is increasing. Photograph: Alamy
The tranquil chorus of the natural world is in danger of being lost
to today’s generation as people screen out the noises that surround
them, a senior US researcher warns.
Rising levels of background noise in some areas threaten to make
people oblivious to the uplifting sounds of birdsong, trickling water,
and trees rustling in the wind, which can often be heard even in urban
centres, said Kurt Fristrup, a senior scientist at the US National Park
Service.
The problem was exacerbated by people listening to iPods through
their earphones instead of tuning in to the birds and other sounds of
nature that can easily be drowned out by traffic, music and others
noises, he said.
“This learned deafness is a real issue,” Fristrup told the American
Association for the Advancement of Science meeting in San Jose. “We are
conditioning ourselves to ignore the information coming into our ears.”
“This gift that we are born with – to reach out and hear things
hundreds of metres away, all these incredible sounds – is in danger of
being lost through a generational amnesia,” he said.
“There is a real danger, both of loss of auditory acuity, where we
are exposed to noise for so long that we stop listening, but also a loss
of listening habits, where we lose the ability to engage with the
environment the way we were built to,” he added.
For the past 10 years, the US National Park Service has recorded
sound levels at more than 600 sites across the US, including Yosemite in
California, Yellowstone and Denali in Alaska. Not one was unaffected by
some form of noise from human activity, be it over-flying aircraft,
motorbikes, motorboats, or tour buses.
Yellowstone National park, Lewis LakePhotograph: Cavan Images/Cavan Images/Cavan Images/Cor
Fristrup’s team combined the sound levels recorded from national
parks with similar data from urban settings to create a model of noise
levels across the US. They predict that noise pollution is growing
faster than the US population, and more than doubles every 30 years.
Advertisement
“It’s
not surprising people are putting on earphones or even noise cancelling
earphones to try and create a quieter or more congenial environment,”
he said.
“As you raise background sound levels it has the same effect on your
hearing that fog would have on your vision. Instead of having this
expansive experience of all the sounds around you, you are aware of only
a small area around you,” he said. “Even in most of our cities there
are birds and things to appreciate in the environment, and there can be
very rich natural choruses to pay attention to. And that is being lost.”
People quickly become accustomed to changes in their environments,
including rising noise levels, and over time, Fristrup fears that we
will accept far worse environmental conditions than we should, and
forget how much quieter the world could be. “If finding peace and quiet
becomes difficult enough, many many children will grow up without the
experience, and I think it’s a very real problem,” he said.
The warning came as other scientists reported beneficial health
effects from listening to natural sounds. Speaking at the same meeting,
Derrick Taff, a social scientist at Pennsylvania State University,
described preliminary experiments which suggest that listening to
recordings from national parks, of waterfalls, birdsong and wind, helped
people recover from the stressful events.
In one experiment, Taff told participants who visited his lab to give
an impromptu talk that would be judged by researchers standing behind a
one-way mirror. Measurements of their heart rate and the stress
hormone, cortisol, before and after the speech, found that people calmed
down faster when they listened to nature recordings than when the same
audio tracks were interspersed with sounds from road traffic,
aeroplanes, and even normal conversation.
“We know that natural sounds are very important to people. They are
some of the main reasons people visit protected areas. They want to hear
the natural quiet, the birdsong, and the wind and water,” Taff said.
“We may be losing this as people are listening to the iPods all the
time, but I do believe that the public is appreciative of these sounds.
My advice is to go to your protected areas and experience what you are
missing.”
Why natural sounds might be calming to people is unclear, but
Fristrup speculates that over millions of years of evolution, we may
have come to associate the more tranquil sounds of the natural world
with safety. “I suspect there’s something about these intact soundscapes
that reminds our ancestral brains of a place that’s safe, where there’s
no sense of a predator nearby, and that these more cluttered
soundscapes are problematic for us because we know we’ve lost that
surveillance capability,” he said.
........................................................................
ไม่มีความคิดเห็น:
แสดงความคิดเห็น