2011
DOI: 10.1525/bio.2011.61.3.6
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Soundscape Ecology: The Science of Sound in the Landscape

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Cited by 901 publications
(628 citation statements)
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References 39 publications
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“…Nonetheless, for ur- ban environments a categorization that can be more representative is closer to the taxonomy of human, natural and technological sources previously used in other studies as well [32,41,42].…”
Section: Model Effectivenessmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Nonetheless, for ur- ban environments a categorization that can be more representative is closer to the taxonomy of human, natural and technological sources previously used in other studies as well [32,41,42].…”
Section: Model Effectivenessmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…People will continue to change the environment due to their subjective initiative, the final result may not be the original idea [6,7], we can see the usage mode of some activities and space in the historic district is remained and some had completely disappeared while considering the continuation of time, which is the inevitable result of the urban environmental evolution. In the design of urban soundscape, sound is likely to be generated in any place with human activity in the city, so if we want to change the voice, we can change the place so as to change people's activity pattern and mode of place use, for example, to separate the talking space from singing and dancing space in the open square can change the way to use space, and then change the soundscape in the square.…”
Section: Methodsologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The soundscape of a habitat is a combination of environmental sounds (geophony) and biological sounds (biophony) (Pijanowski et al 2011). Therefore, soundscapes in rivers integrate many physical and biological processes, but are likely to be dominated by the hydraulic conditions.…”
Section: Perception Of Topography and Relative Submergencementioning
confidence: 99%