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3.1
Methodologies Associated with Each Model
3.1.1 Methodological Framework Development
3.1.1.1 Main Methodological Components
When the WSP started to document the soundscape of Vancouver, no
similar study had been accomplished there were no methodologies
available to guide the researchers and frame their process. The
subjective and interdisciplinary components of the research project
necessitated the design of a different methodology, which would
combine objective measurements, ethnographic observations and the
integration of social/cultural issues in the analysis of the soundscape.
While the actual methodology used by the WSP was at no point described
explicitly, a survey of the three main projects realised
the Vancouver soundscape, the cross-Canada tour and the five European
villages reveals five main methodological components: (a)
spatial distribution, (b) time distribution (be it over a day or
a decade), (c) legislation, (d) subjective reactions and (e) recordings.
To obtain data in each of these areas, a series of observational
techniques were designed. These various methods aimed at covering
the soundscape through all its perspectives be
it historical, cultural, economic, legal, geographic, etc.
The translation of sound into graphic representations is one of
the many challenges faced by soundscape studies in its attempt to
analyse and describe the sound environment. Traditional objective
systems such as music notation and frequency spectrum graphics quickly
appeared as inadequate when dealing with complex soundscapes and
their perception. The WSP began to use alternative types of graphic
representations to deal with issues of space, diffusion and to integrate
several types of data (level, location, sound sources, profile
)
into a single graphic form. Isobel maps such as the one of the Stanley
Park presented in The Vancouver Soundscape (1978) were used to show
decibel levels over a specific area, and to emphasise the main sound
sources and their location. The comparison of isobel maps representing
different times can also be used to examine the variations in levels
corresponding to economic and social activities, or even natural
causes (see the isobel maps illustrating the variations due to wind
and the sound of waves at Lesconil; Schafer, 1977b, p. 41)
Acoustic profiles, the area across which a specific sound can be
heard, were also mapped to explore dominant sounds and their relation
to the acoustic community. In the Five Village Soundscapes (1977b),
for instance, the acoustic profile of the church bell at Bissingen
was used to emphasise the progressive rise of ambient level, and
the parallel between the shrinking acoustic space of the Cathedral
bells and its dwindling congregation (p. 15). The profiles
also indicate if specific sound sources (traffic noise, for instance)
may cause an environment to become lo-fi.
The distribution of sounds and sound levels over time has been extensively
used by the WSP to identify rhythms, patterns, and to show how dominant
sounds are often related to the dominant social or economic activities.
Graphics based on sound counts and level readings are constructed
and compared to identify, for instance, the importance of particular
sound signals, the changes in ambient level a period of time, or
the natural rhythms of the environment. These graphics have been
used in the Five Village Soundscapes (1977b) to compare the sound
environment of different towns based on objective data.
One of the first documents produced by the WSP was A Survey of Community
Noise By-Laws in Canada (1972). This document, as its title indicates,
presents the noise bylaws (or the absence thereof) of most of the
Canadians cities whose population was over 25,000 in 1972. The goal
of such a survey was, according to the group, to enable legislators
to compare notes (World Soundscape Project, 1972, p. 1). However,
when this survey of noise bylaws was extended to other continents
(though unpublished), the WSP began to read cultural differences
through legislation. Noise bylaws, Schafer argues, can be
read to reveal different cultural attitudes towards sound phobias
(1977c, p. 197). The silencing of specific sounds over others may
also reveal changes in social structures. The notion of Sacred Noise,
a sound which is not subjugated to bylaws, points on the other hand
to sound source expressing a particular power, be it the divine
sounds of the church bell or the modern sound of the plane taking
off (Schafer, 1977c).
As a fourth approach to the study of the sound environment, the
WSP has inquired into attitudes and subjective reactions to the
soundscape or to particular sound sources, notably through interviews
and surveys. As early as 1969, Schafer conducted (with the help
of his students) a social survey on noise, in a way to acquire
statistical information about the publics interest in, and
opinion of, the problem of pollution (Torigoe, 1982, p. 91).
Later, during the 1975 tour leading to the publication of the Five
Village Soundscapes (1977b), the team used Sound Preference Tests
to survey the most liked and disliked sounds of children in every
village. Interviews with citizens with a special interest
to their acoustic environment (Schafer, 1977b, p. 67) were
also conducted to gather additional information about the everyday
relation of people to their environment, and in a way to complement
their outsider position as researchers and observers.
Finally, recordings of soundscapes and sound signals have been made
in every environment studied by the World Soundscape Project. While
these recordings were primarily considered for their archival and
educational value, they also represented a very rich source of information,
and their manipulation by the researchers/composers of the WSP initiated
what later became known as soundscape composition (Truax, 1995).
Montages and compositions based on field recordings were used notably
in a radio series produced by the WSP for the CBC in 1974, Soundscapes
of Canada. Members of the WSP such as Hildegard Westerkamp and Barry
Truax continue to explore soundscape composition and its role in
the larger context of soundscape studies and acoustic ecology (McCartney,
2000; Truax, 1993, 1995, 2002).
The extensive methodology developed by Pascal Amphoux with the CRESSON
group and the IREC has been defined as an interdisciplinary
tool to analyse the sonic quality of urban spaces (Amphoux,
1991, p. 12; my translation). It provides researchers with a detailed
set of guidelines that have been designed and tested through a large
comparative study of three Swiss cities (see Amphoux, 1991). While
the approach ultimately led to the description of the sonic identity
of a city as it is heard and experienced by local and foreign listeners,
it also appears extremely valuable to any subjective analysis of
a sound environment in which the focus is on inhabitant-listeners
perspective. In this way, it is complementary to the WSPs
approach, which although was fundamentally qualitative, tended generally
to emphasise the role of the external observer over the local listeners
perspectives (Uimonen, 2002). The main problem encountered by soundscape
researchers is that when they are interviewed, people find
it difficult to talk about issues that concern their everyday, contemporary
sonic environment (p. 171). If one wants to incorporate the
sonic knowledge of local inhabitants to complement the researchers
fresh ear, particular techniques must be deigned to
trigger a sonic awareness, and allow non-expert listeners to express
their relationships to their environment.
Amphouxs methodology dealing with sonic identity is divided
into three main steps, in order to provide researchers with a large
amount and variety of information concerning peoples knowledge,
opinions and perceptions of their sound environment. Recurrence
through listeners interviews will therefore guide the attention
of researchers towards specific location, feature or design issues.
The particular techniques used in each section will be described
in more detail in the following section, according to their degree
of integration in our proposed synthesis. The overall methodological
process consists in the selection of specific locations, based on
initial interviews and the use of sonic mind maps. Then, researchers
produce documented recordings of these spaces, which are then re-presented
out of context (on loudspeakers or headphones) to various local
and foreign listeners. Finally, the information gathered is interpreted
and synthesised, notably with the use of qualitative criteria, in
a way to emphasise the overall sonic qualities proper to each location,
and which constitute the unique sonic identity of the city.
The first step consists in the use of sonic memory to select representative
locations to be further studied (Amphoux, 1991, 1993a). The use
of sonic mind maps and phono-reputational inquiries will present
researchers with a list of potential locations and an initial number
of comments on each space. The final choices will be made based
on the use of the C-V-S model; for a city-wide study, it is recommended
to choose three to four spaces that express each of the types of
relationship to the environment (known, lived, sensed) (Amphoux,
1993a). Data gathered in this section will also be used in the final,
interpretative step of this methodology.
Once representative locations have been chosen, the second step,
based on sonic perception, can be initiated. According to Amphoux
(1993a), projects of smaller scale with limited resources or time
may proceed directly to the third and final step. The second section
constitutes both a logical continuation on the technical level,
in the sense that it focuses on selected locations, and a reprise,
on the methodological level, since its objective is to re-use and
specify the primary qualitative criteria found in the first phase
(Amphoux, 1991, p. 55; my translation). Amphoux provides very specific
directives guiding the recording and subsequent studio-based montage
of audio clips to be used in the reactivated listening sessions.
The selected clips will be presented to a varied group of local
(and foreign, if feasible) listeners covering three important dimensions
of the city: the sonic (acousticians, visually-impaired people,
musicians
), the spatial (architects, town-planners, historians
)
and the socio-cultural dimensions (semioticians, psychologists,
sociologists
) (Amphoux, 1991, p. 70). Then, the results of
these extended interviews will be synthesised using a chart
of sequential analysis (p. 74; my translation), providing
researchers with significant components of the inquiries to be used
in the final interpretation.
The third and final step involves the sonic interpretation of the
citys sonic identity features. This process will result in
the production of a sonic identity chart (Hellström,
2003, p. 58; see also Appendix F) for
each sequence/location, and which is composed of factual information
about the sequence, listeners comments, the application of
corresponding qualitative criteria as well as expressions or quotes
which are particularly evocative in their description or identification
of a location or ambiance (see Amphoux, 1993a, p. 33).
3.1.1.2 Field Methods
The field observation methods developed by the WSP were specifically
designed in order to gather a maximum of information about a particular
soundscape, and to allow further analysis of these data through
maps, graphs, comparisons and statistical measurement. In the case
of the Five Village Soundscapes (1977b), the need for an efficient
and complete method was even more evident, because of the limited
time the team spent in each village (from seven to ten days). The
practical methodology may be divided into two main parts, corresponding
to the two traditional research paradigms: objective and quantifiable
data to describe features of the soundscape on the one hand, and
subjective, ethnographic information about peoples relation
to the environment on the other.
To be able to create various maps, graphs and statistical charts,
WSP researchers used extensive sound counts and sound level measurements
produced over a particular area, or a specific period of time. A
sound count consists in the counting of a particular type of sound
heard in a specific location, in a way to express a quantitative
impression of the density of certain sounds (Schafer, 1978,
p. 64). When sound counts are compared over time, acoustic patterns
may be discovered, and their unfolding can be detailed. Sound level
measurements allow researchers to draw a map of the sound intensities
of a location, and to evaluate changes in intensity through time.
Measurements found in the WSP publications are either in dBA or
dBC. Isobel maps generally use dBA (designed to reflect the human
hearing curve), while in certain particular cases in which the low
frequency range may play an important role, a comparison between
A and C measurements is presented. It is the case for instance in
the Five Village Soundscapes (1977b), when the impact of a loud
car parking in a quiet environment is described using the two scales
(Schafer, 1977b, p. 61), and to emphasise the prevalence of aircraft
noise in Bissingen (p. 58). The same comparison is also used to
reveal hidden low frequencies felt in a quiet reading
room (1977a, p. 31-2).
Recordings have been introduced in the field research of the WSP
right from the beginning. Torigoe (1982) refers to 1972 as the first
year during which team members produced recordings, in preparation
for The Vancouver Soundscape (1978). In terms of recording techniques
or methods, there seems to be no formal process; while particular
attention is given to important sound signals and soundmarks, the
collection of recordings from the WSP library (carefully preserved
at the School of Communication, Simon Fraser University) presents
a variety of soundwalks, events, themes, keynotes, signals, ambiences
and others. In recordings from the cross-Canada tour, more specifically,
certain themes such as train whistles, foghorns, church bells, disappearing
sounds and local dialects and the whats on the AM radio
clips (Davis & Huse, 1974, p. 34) can be followed. However,
one common feature of every recording made by the WSP members is
that it is accompanied by an information card providing data such
as the time and location of the recording, any atmospheric, historical,
sociological information, tape speed, distance from the source,
intensity level measured and any other pertinent data (Schafer,
1977b). Also included on this card is a set of visual representations
used to describe the behaviour of the sound event over time, with
parameters such as duration, dynamics, frequency/mass and fluctuations/grain
for each main section of the sound (attack, body, decay).
To describe in more subjective and contextualised form the relations
between the soundscape and its inhabitants, WSP researchers also
use ethnographic resources, which can then be compared and combined
with quantitative data. In the case of The Vancouver Soundscape
(1978) and the Five Village Soundscapes (1977b), this begins with
a visit to local archives, in search for bylaws, articles or stories
which would provide historical information about the soundscape
researched. Literature may also provide vivid descriptions of past
soundscapes, as illustrated by Schafers extensive use of literary
depictions from a large number of authors in The Tuning of the World
(1977c). Historical data may also be found in earwitness
accounts from inhabitants. Interviews with elderly members of the
Vancouver community, for instance, provided the WSP with descriptions
of the citys past soundscape called earwitness accounts
that could not be found elsewhere. In the same way, extremely valuable
information was collected in Dollar, Scotland, through an in situ
interview with the former town clerk (Schafer, 1977b).
These interviews are also extended to diverse members of a community,
either because of their particular sensitivity to the soundscape
or simply because they have something particular to express about
it. In The Vancouver Soundscape (1978) for instance, inhabitants
of two contrasting regions (central Vancouver and Vancouver Islands
countryside) were interviewed about their sound preferences and
their appreciation of their sound environment (Schafer, 1978, p.
60-1). This provided researchers with subjective answers that could
be compared, in a way to emphasise common themes and preferences.
Similar types of information were obtained in the Five Village Soundscapes
(1977b) by providing children from every town with a Sound Preference
test. This test simply asked for lists of the most liked and
disliked sounds in the local environment (p. 68). Results
were then assessed in terms of the social, geographical or architectural
features of each town.
At the core of an acoustic design program, according to Schafer,
must lie exercises such as listening walks and soundwalks (1977c).
These methods can also be applied to the exploration of a soundscape,
as they emphasise sounds over sight. A listening walk is simply
a walk with a concentration on listening (p. 212); this can
be achieved anywhere, and is often essential in finding features
such as keynotes, patterns, masking
Soundwalks, on the other
hand, are an exploration of the soundscape of a given area
using a score (p. 213). They are planned tours, designed to
raise the awareness of its participants to the sonic components
of their environments. While Schafer and the WSP make a clear distinction
between these two terms, they are now commonly used interchangeably.
Michael Southworth (1969) also used listening walks in his study
of the sonic environment of Boston. By comparing the experience
of three participants, (the first being blindfolded, the second
wearing earplugs while the third one had a normal, neutral
perception), Southworth emphasised the role of auditory components
in ones appreciation of an environment and the interaction
between visual and auditory stimuli.
A last tool described and used by the WSP is the sound diary, a
personal journal kept by each researcher which records their various
thoughts on sound experiences, particular moments, emotions or stories.
The sound diary, and its companion piece, the soundwalk, are
easy to compile, and by directing attention to a sense often ignored
they can be useful educational experiences for everyone (Schafer,
1977a, p. 1). Not only does a diary provide an insight in the researchers
personal experience, but it also encourages self-reflection, and
gives the researcher a space to connect his or her own experience
to broader theoretical concerns. The WSP has published a collection
of diary excerpts from the European tour, European Sound Diary,
which offers the reader varied thoughts from four researchers complemented
with various documents from the tour (soundwalks, graphs, maps
)
(Schafer, 1977a).
The European methodology presented in Amphouxs The Sonic Identity
of European Cities (1993a, 1993b) presents several techniques to
collect various comments, opinions and perceptions from local and
foreign listeners. Many of these are designed to facilitate the
expression of an acoustic culture, local significations which are
often treated unconsciously by inhabitants and which must therefore
be triggered. Four important components of this methodology
will be integrated into our current project, based on their complementarity
to the WSPs techniques previously discussed and their applicability
to the smaller scale of the present case study (a district, rather
than a whole city).
The initial step of the methodology is to quickly gather general
information about the city (or the district) that will allow researchers
to produce a list of potential locations. What is important here
is to reach a variety of inhabitants and appeal to their sonic memory
in various ways. Sonic mind maps have been proposed as a relatively
simple and efficient technique to collect such information (Amphoux,
1991; Hellström, 2003). Mind maps have been previously used
in various disciplines such as geography and psychology to study
peoples relationship to their environment. A sonic mind map
is a map that one draws of his or her city (in our case district);
it can include sound sources, particular locations, streets and
buildings, urban routes and daily routines, etc. The goal here is
to force a change of logic (Amphoux, 1993a, p. 11; my
translation) and trigger an altered appreciation and description
of ones sound environment. Each session can be done on an
individual basis, and should not take more than 15 minutes (Amphoux,
1993a).
Once a sufficient number of maps have been gathered, analysed and
compared, researchers can start listing potential sites for further
analysis and recording, while compiling general information about
the city and its daily perception. The second technique involving
sonic memory is the phono-reputational inquiry (Amphoux, 1991; Hellström,
2003), a series of recorded interviews with people who have a particular
relation to their city and/or sound environment (being either a
user of the city, e.g. street musician, home worker,
mailperson, or else being situated on the representational
level of the city, e.g. journalist, writer, historian, town planner
).
These open group interviews should cover three main topics: the
enumeration and discussion of various locations that present particular
sonic qualities, soundmarks and other sonic signatures of the city,
and finally a more elaborate discussion of the various criteria
of acoustic quality which appear important to the interviewees.
Researchers can make use of appropriate sonic mind maps to feed
the discussion and trigger comments (Amphoux, 1991, 1993a).
The second section of the methodology comprises two main components,
the recording of chosen locations and the presentation of resulting
audio clips in reactivated listening sessions. Amphoux (1991, 1993a)
provides very specific guidelines in terms of the pre-production
work to be accomplished, as well as the modalities of recording
and montage. Synoptic forms (Hellström, 2003) provide, in the
same way as the WSPs information cards, contextual details
about each location. These cards will however be produced before
the recording sessions, based on previous interviews, to provide
recording technicians with enough information to produce an audio
document that represents, or include features that have been indicated
by interviewees. The synoptic forms include the location of the
recording, an overview of the background, ambience and signals to
be heard, an intention, that is, a basic hypothesis of the qualitative
criteria of the location to guide the recording, and finally various
information concerning the appropriate schedules to record specific
sounds or ambiences, or other pertinent details (see Amphoux, 1993a,
p. 20; Hellström, 2003, p.154).
Reactivated listening sessions have been initiated at CRESSON by
Jean-François Augoyard in 1979, inspired by the observation
techniques developed at the Palo Alto School (Amphoux, 1991). This
technique consists in the presentation of audio recordings of specific
environments to various listeners, in a way to trigger various comments,
memories and discussions concerning the recognition (or not) of
the location, its assessment, etc. Here, the listener in placed
in a schizophonic situation, the technique introducing a distance
between ones everyday environment and its reactivated perception
through loudspeakers or headphones. This, according to Amphoux,
allows the reactivation of a listening in ordinary contexts,
as it is experienced in ones everyday as well as a reaction
to the listening linked to the gap between the real and its recorded
representation (1991, p. 58; my translation). Chris J. Smith
(1993) has also used a similar technique in his exploration of three
residential neighbourhoods of Vancouver.
These sessions should involve either actual inhabitants of the city,
who will be able to comment as local but non-specialised listeners
(1993a, p. 26; my translation), or specialists in various disciplines
related to sound who are not necessarily living in the studied environment.
The individual interviews should keep an open format, with about
ten clips presented per session through loudspeakers (to allow the
researcher to hear the particular elements that may trigger reactions
(1991, 1993a). Information from each sequence heard is tabulated
on a chart of sequential analysis which includes the profile of
the interviewee, expectations of the researcher concerning the interpretation
of the sequence, a condensed transcription, particular expressions
used, a free interpretation of the interview by the researcher and
an actualisation of the previous hypothesis (see Amphoux, 1993a,
p. 30).
3.1.2 Examples of Application of the Methodology
The WSPs approach to the sound environment emphasised the
necessity for researchers to accomplish field observations and analysis.
Soundscape studies, according to the WSP, should not be a discipline
confined to laboratories, studios or university classes; it must
have its basis in the everyday acoustic communities, where the unfolding
soundscape remains unnoticed.
The first field of research of the WSP was the region in which it
was located: Greater Vancouver. Archival research, recordings, interviews
and measurements led to the publication of The Vancouver Soundscape
(whose first edition was published in 1974), which describes the
historical evolution of the soundscape of Vancouver, and its recent
transition from hi-fi to lo-fi. This first important project allowed
the team to describe and present their developing concepts, and
the way in which these can be used practically to analyse and assess
a particular sound environment. The accompanying recordings complemented
the texts with audio examples including natural sounds, signals
and soundmarks of Vancouver.
The main theme of the Vancouver Soundscape, that is, the decreasing
quality of urban spaces attributed to the increased presence of
industrial and electric technologies, will be returned to in later
studies and publications. We must return to the Vancouver
soundscape the flavour of its original elements cataracts,
swift flowing waters and ocean waves, the inimitable sound of wind
in evergreen trees, and the natural resonance of wood, shell and
stone. That will be our task (Schafer, 1978, p. 66). But the
romanticism of Schafers view and the numerous technophobic
references found in the publication have not gone unnoticed. For
Torigoe (1982), the biased view of modern technology in the
aesthetic, and even moral, sense might be the reason that prevents
the Project from involving itself actively enough in the actual
alteration and creation of soundscape (p. 164).
In 1973, two members of the WSP, Bruce Davis and Peter Huse, completed
a cross-Canada tour in which they gathered an extensive amount of
recordings, measurements and notes covering the whole country (Davis
& Huse, 1974). The goal of this field recording tour was to
extend the study of the sound environment to the national level,
while recording disappearing sounds, regional or local keynotes,
important signals etc. The study itself has not been published,
but it has been incorporated into a 1974 CBC radio series, Soundscapes
of Canada. While most of the ten programs were independent compositions
produced by different members of the team, some of them focused
more specifically on features of the Canadian soundscape (notably
programs 3, 4 and 6), and in many cases the sounds recorded by Davis
and Huse were used compositionally (see Torigoe, 1982; Truax, 1996b).
The most extensive project accomplished by the WSP remains the five
European villages tour. In 1975, five researchers visited five small
towns, each in a different country, over a period of five months.
They stayed in each location for seven to ten days, gathering as
much information as possible concerning the acoustic history and
present state of each town (Schafer, 1977b). The villages were chosen
to present similar features (self-contained towns, less than 3000
inhabitants, important social life, distinctive sound signals, etc.);
they were preferred to larger cities, since, according to Schafer,
the prospect of arriving at intelligent conclusions regarding
the complex soundscapes of cities in the brief time at [their] disposal would have been quite impossible (p.
1). The five villages studied were Skruv in Sweden, Bissingen in
Germany, Cembra in Italy, Lesconil in France and Dollar in Scotland.
The results of this extensive field study were published in two
different books, Five Village Soundscapes (1977b) and European Sound
Diary (1977a). The first book presents a summary of the study, including
maps, graphs, results from the Sound Preference Tests and an extended
interview with the former town clerk of Dollar, David Graham. Again,
recordings were also included to illustrate results of the tour
while presenting audio examples of the sounds and soundscapes heard
in each village. The second book, on the other hand, is a compilation
of sound journal excerpts written by four of the researchers throughout
their trip, and accompanied with various graphs, pictures and a
series of soundwalks. This second publication can be seen as an
attempt to present a different account of the tour by providing
the reader with insights from the researchers experiences,
while illustrating the usefulness of sound diaries for sound education.
A later attempt to document the sound environment of Chemainus,
a small town on Vancouver Island in B.C., was not completed because
of a lack of financial support (Truax, 1996a). The Five Village
Soundscapes (1977b) can therefore be seen as the final methodological
development of the WSP. The fact that the group could only spend
about a week in each location made it necessary to design a clear
and defined working method; if we add to this the previous field
experience of members and the growing vocabulary and conceptual
tools available, this makes the Five Village Soundscape an extremely
rich source of information, not only about the changing sound environment
of each village but also about the different ways available to obtain
information and classify historical, social, economic and sonic
data. Furthermore, the introduction of a comparative perspective
using five different types of villages required the research team
to develop a more systematic method of collecting data (Torigoe,
1982, p. 190). This results notably in the extensive use of comparative
graphs, and a better understanding of the complex dynamics between
the main economic or social institutions of a village and the main
sonic attributes of the location.
The sonic identity methodology has been developed and tested through
a large comparative study of three Swiss cities in 1991, and whose
results were published in Aux Écoutes de la Ville [Listening to the City] (Amphoux, 1991). The team, a collaboration between
CRESSON and IREC, applied the developed techniques to Lausanne,
Locarno and Zürich. This theoretical and methodological challenge
was inscribed in the process of the constitution of a European
research network on the sonic quality of inhabited spaces
(p. 8; my translation) initiated by the CRESSON. The extensive study
also led to the publication of a methodological guide aimed at city
planners, sound technicians and social science researchers, LIdentité
Sonore des Villes Européennes [The Sonic Identity of European Cities] (Amphoux, 1993a, 1993b). This 2-volume guideline provides
a brief but clear introduction to the methodology designed by the
CRESSON and the IREC, and provides research insights to support
further comparative studies, in Europe or elsewhere. The first volume
consists in the survey of the three-step methodological process,
while the second volume is a repertoire of concepts, including the
extensive list of qualitative criteria and a brief, summarised listing
of the sound effects, also used in Amphouxs approach.
Another team of Spanish researchers has also used this methodology
to discuss the issue of noise pollution and subjective reactions
to sound in inhabited spaces (Barrio & Carles, 1995). Sonic
mind maps and reactivated listening were notably used by the Psychoacoustics
Laboratory at the Instituto de Acústica in Madrid to explore
the various ways in which environments are subjectively identified
and assessed, and to describe the particular sonic identities of
the city. While this particular project did not involve an inter-city
comparison, it used qualitative techniques as complements to the
traditional noise study approach, and initiated an ever-expanding
sound archive which houses varied materials reflecting the traditional
activities carried out throughout Spain (Barrio & Carles,
1995, p. 6) The Laboratory has continued its collaboration with
the CRESSON in a joint project on the qualitative analysis of inhabited
spaces.
Björn Hellström has also used the concept of sound effect
and the methodology designed by Amphoux in a study of the district
of Klara, in Stockholm (Hellström, 2003). The Tourist Information
Guide to Environmental Resonance (TIGER) project was presented from
1996 to 1998, as a multimedia exhibition which presents the results
of an in situ study of the district based on specific sound effects
and the use of an environmental listening approach (E) as defined
by Amphoux. In the exhibition, nine locations were explored visually
and graphically. This project was then incorporated in Hellströms
doctoral dissertation, Noise Design: Architectural Modelling and
the Aesthetics of Urban Acoustic Space (2003).
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© David Paquette 2004
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