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Design of measurement methodology for the evaluation of human exposure to vibration in residential environments

Sica, G; Peris, E; Woodcock, JS; Moorhouse, AT

Authors

G Sica

E Peris

JS Woodcock

AT Moorhouse



Abstract

Exposure-response relationships are important tools for policy makers to assess the impact of an environmental stressor on the populace. Their validity lies partly in their statistical strength which is greatly influenced by the size of the sample from which the relationship is derived. As such, the derivation of meaningful exposure-response relationships requires estimates of vibration exposure at a large number of receiver locations. In the United Kingdom a socio-vibrational survey has been conducted with the aim of deriving exposure-response relationships for annoyance due to vibration from (a) railway traffic and (b) the construction of a new light rail system. Response to vibration was measured via a questionnaire conducted face-to-face with residents in their own homes and vibration exposure was estimated using data from a novel measurement methodology. In total, 1281 questionnaires were conducted: 931 for vibration from railway traffic and 350 for vibration from construction sources. Considering the interdisciplinary nature of this work along with the volume of experimental data required, a number of significant technical and logistical challenges needed to be overcome through the planning and implementation of the fieldwork. Four of these challenges are considered in this paper: the site identification for providing a robust sample of the residents affected, the strategies used for measuring both exposure and response and the coordination between the teams carrying out the social survey and the vibration measurements.

Citation

Sica, G., Peris, E., Woodcock, J., & Moorhouse, A. (2013). Design of measurement methodology for the evaluation of human exposure to vibration in residential environments. Science of the Total Environment, 482-3, 461-471. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2013.07.006

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jul 1, 2013
Online Publication Date Jul 13, 2013
Publication Date Jul 13, 2013
Deposit Date Nov 8, 2013
Journal Science of the Total Environment
Print ISSN 0048-9697
Publisher Elsevier
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 482-3
Pages 461-471
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2013.07.006
Keywords Human exposure; Annoyance; Measurement methodology; Railway vibration; Construction vibration; Exposure–response relationship
Publisher URL http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2013.07.006
Related Public URLs http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/00489697/482/supp/C
Additional Information References : ANSI S2.71-1983 (R2006). Guide to the evaluation of human exposure to vibration in buildings. American National Standards Institute; 2006. Arcos R, Romeu J, Balastegui A, Pameis T. Determination of the near field distance for point and line sources acting on the surface of an homogenous and viscoelastic half-space. Soil Dyn Earthq Eng 2011;31:1072–4. Association of Noise Consultants Guidelines. Measurement and assessment of groundborne noise and vibration (ANC guidelines). 1st ed. London: Fresco; 2001. Auersch L, Said S. Attenuation of ground vibrations due to different technical sources. Earthq Eng Eng Vib 2010;9:337–44. Barkan DD. Dynamics of bases and foundations. McGraw-Hill Book Co.; 1960 Bormann P. New manual of seismological observatory practice. Practice. rev. ed. Postdam: GFZ; 2009. BS 5228-2:2009. Code of practice for noise and vibration control on construction and open sites. British Standards Institution; 2009. BS 6472-1:1992. Guide to evaluation of human response to vibration in buildings (1 Hz to 80 Hz) — part 1: vibration sources other than blasting. British Standards Institution; 1992.
Projects : Human response to vibration in residential environments (NANR209)




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