| Barry Truax |
Spring
2002
|
| CC6146/604-291-4261 |
Burnaby
Day
|
| email: truax@sfu.ca |
ACOUSTIC DIMENSIONS OF COMMUNICATION II
Overview:
This course is designed in seminar/lab format as an intermediate level work
group in the field of acoustic communication. The topics to be presented in
the seminar will include acoustic design, soundscape studies, noise in the community,
orality, language and interpersonal communication, electro-acoustic media, listening
and sound cognition. A basic bibliography and relevant articles will be provided
on Library reserve.
The lab portion of the course will systematically survey the wide range of terminology
and knowledge associated with the behaviour and perception of sound (acoustics
and psychoacoustics), including the specialized areas of speech acoustics, audiology
and hearing loss, noise measurement and damage risk criteria.
Student work will normally consist of an essay and a project on a topic of the
students choice in the field of acoustic communication. The essay will
involve library or other research and the project will be more applied or field
oriented. Grading will be by letter grade average of these projects, each worth
40% of the final grade, with the remaining 20% from the final terminology quiz
associated with the lab work. A report on one of these projects will be expected
during the last seminar. Examples of general areas in which projects may be
based are:
Fieldwork or Library research in the area of noise, environmental sound or hearing
loss.
Soundscape analysis, or studies of aspects of aural perception and listening.
Language, soundmaking and/or non-verbal aspects of interpersonal communication.
Acoustic aspects of social organization.
Impact of electroacoustic technology on acoustic communication.
Detailed Course Outline:
www.sfu.ca/sonic-studio/srs
Prerequisite:
CMNS 259-3 or permission of the Instructor.
Enrollment Limit: 12 students
Texts:
B. Truax, Acoustic Communication (2nd edition) Ablex, 2000. (Note: book includes
CD-ROM).
B. Truax, (ed.), Handbook for Acoustic Ecology. CD-ROM version, Cambridge Street
Publishing, 199
The School expects that the grades awarded in this course will bear some reasonable relation to established university-wide practices with respect to both levels and distribution of grades. In addition, the School will follow Policy T10.02 with respect to Intellectual Honesty, and Academic Discipline (see the current Calendar, General Regulations Section).