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Skip search results from other journals and go to results- 1 Interactive Journal of Medical Research
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Occupational noise is a common physical hazard that is considered loud or hazardous when it reaches 85 A-weighted Decibels (d BA) or higher in industrial working environments [1]. Prolonged exposure to excessive noise in the workplace could lead to occupational noise–induced deafness (ONID), a sensorineural hearing impairment that manifests as a high-frequency hearing loss during its early stages and gradually progresses to affect speech frequencies [2].
JMIR Public Health Surveill 2024;10:e57851
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In contrast, Allen and Pammer [24] did not find any white noise effects from noise played at “medium volume” in children with ADHD, nor did Metin et al [25] find any effects on decision-making from pink noise stimulation in the same group.
JMIR Res Protoc 2024;13:e56388
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Noise was measured using objective sound level meters in 10 (91%) of the 11 studies, while 1 (9%) study [32] used the environment portion of the ABMI [67].
Of the 5 observational studies, 2 (40%) examined the relationship between noise and agitation among participants with dementia [25,44], and 1 (20%) of the 5 experimental studies aimed to decrease agitation using a white noise intervention [49].
Interact J Med Res 2024;13:e56452
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Many methods exist to reduce noise in raw signal data (ie, sample-level or high-frequency signal data), particularly when the source of the noise is well characterized. Unfortunately, consumer devices typically do not give access to such high-frequency data, but their firmware and adaptive data collection methods are thought to include steps that account for skin tone–related errors and motion artifacts. Unfortunately, the public has no way of assessing how well these methods perform.
JMIR Mhealth Uhealth 2023;11:e45103
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