Effects of a Hovering Unmanned Aerial Vehicle on Urban Soundscapes Perception
Antonio J. Torija, Zhengguang Li, Rod H. Self

TL;DR
This study investigates how drone noise affects urban soundscape perception, revealing increased annoyance and decreased pleasantness in quieter environments, suggesting strategic drone operation placement could mitigate community noise impact.
Contribution
It provides empirical evidence on drone noise perception in urban soundscapes, highlighting the importance of context in community acceptance and proposing operational strategies to reduce noise impact.
Findings
Drone noise increases perceived annoyance in quieter areas.
In noisy environments, drone noise causes minimal perceptual change.
Strategic placement of drone flight paths can reduce community noise impact.
Abstract
Several industry leaders and governmental agencies are currently investigating the use of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs), or drones as commonly known, for an ever-growing number of applications from blue light services to parcel delivery. For the specific case of the delivery sector, drones can alleviate road space usage and also lead to reductions in CO2 and air pollution emissions, compared to traditional diesel-powered vehicles. However, due to their unconventional acoustic characteristics and operational manoeuvres, it is uncertain how communities will respond to drone operations. Noise has been suggested as a major barrier to public acceptance of drone operations in urban areas. In this paper, a series of audio-visual scenarios were created to investigate the effects of drone noise on the reported loudness, annoyance and pleasantness of seven different types of urban soundscapes.…
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