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Plenary Lecture
Sound Quality

Professor Malcolm J. Crocker
Distinguished University Professor, Director, Sound & Vibration Research
Laboratories
Mechanical Engineering Department
270 Ross Hall
Auburn University
Auburn, AL 36849, USA
E-mail: mcrocker@eng.auburn.edu
Abstract: Throughout the twentieth century, engineers have used
increasingly sophisticated experimental and theoretical approaches to reduce
the noise of machines, vehicles, aircraft, etc. Since the mid-1980s it has
become apparent to manufacturers that it is insufficient simply to reduce
overall noise levels. In most cases the noise of vehicles, appliances, etc,
has been sufficiently suppressed that it no longer poses a hearing loss
hazard after extended exposure, or interferes with speech, sleep and other
activities of occupants. Other properties of the noise, in addition to its
overall sound pressure level, such as loudness, frequency content, tonal
components, impulsiveness, and level fluctuations may determine whether the
quality of the noise is acceptable or not in particular circumstances.
Product sound quality studies have been made on household appliances,
air-conditioning systems, high speed trains, etc., although most attention
has been paid to interior vehicle noise. This paper reviews the main
properties of sound that are important in sound quality determination and
includes some of the author’s own experimental evaluations of the sound
quality of four automobiles.
Brief Biography of the Speaker:
Dr. Crocker has 45 years' research experience in the areas of experimental
and theoretical acoustics, vibration and noise control. He was named
Assistant Director/Acoustics of Purdue's Ray W. Herrick Laboratories in
1977, where he also conducted research on vehicle and machinery noise from
1969 to 1983. He has published over 350 technical articles and books in
acoustics and vibration and noise control. He was a founding director of
INCE/USA in 1971 and of International/INCE in 1974. Dr. Crocker was general
chair of Internoise 1972 and the 1981 President of INCE/USA. From 1973 to
1994 he served as Editor-in-Chief of the international refereed publication:
Noise Control Engineering Journal. He has also served as Editor-in-Chief of
the four volume 2000 page Encyclopedia of Acoustics published by John Wiley
and Sons in 1997 and the single volume Handbook of Acoustics in 1998. The
Encyclopedia won the 1997 award of the American Association of Publishers
for excellence in professional and scholarly publishing. He has served as
Executive Director of IIAV since 1995 and Editor-in-chief of the
International Journal of Acoustics and Vibration since 1996. His Handbook of
Noise and Vibration Control was published by John Wiley and Sons in 2007. In
the last 38 years Dr. Crocker has been principal investigator on over 70
research contracts for industry and government and has supervised over 50
graduate students. He currently has two three-year NASA contracts to study
and predict spacecraft rocket exhaust noise at launch and the turbulent
boundary layer and separated flow noise and oscillating shock pressure
fluctuations on the NASA Orion/Ares space vehicle, which will replace the
Shuttle Orbiter. Dr Crocker has three honorary doctorates from Bucharest and
Craiova, Romania and St. Petersburg, Russia.
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