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Personal Listening Devices in Australia: Patterns of Use and Levels of Risk
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Hearing protection devices : use at work predicts use at play
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Providing earplugs to young adults at risk encourages protective behaviour in music venues
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Developing sound skills for reading : teaching phonological awareness to preschoolers with hearing loss
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Developing sound skills for reading: teaching phonological awareness to preschoolers with hearing loss
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Changing beliefs about leisure noise : using health promotion models to investigate young people's engagement with, and attitudes towards, hearing health
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Instrumental music teachers : music exposure and hearing loss
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Noise exposure in the balance : managing occupational and leisure risks to hearing health
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A Snapshot of young adults' noise exposure reveals evidence of 'binge listening'
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When expectation meets experience : parents' recollections of and experiences with a child diagnosed with hearing loss soon after birth
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The NOISE (Non-Occupational Incidents, Situations and Events) database : a new research tool
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Abstract:
This paper describes the development of the NOISE (Non-Occupational Incidents, Situations and Events) Database. The NOISE database currently contains 536 separate leisure activities and events, including noise level measurements, (L Aeq and L Cpeak), and detailed information about the circumstances of each event. The data are organized into seven categories, in which high-noise events and activities can be identified. Thirty-five percent of events in the database were over 85 dB (the level at which noise is considered a risk according to workplace standards) and 3% were over 100 dB. Fourteen percent of events exceeded the acceptable workplace noise exposure limit of 1.01 Pa²h. The noise exposure levels recorded in the database can be used to identify high-risk leisure activities and to estimate individuals' leisure noise exposures and make comparisons between leisure and workplace noise exposures. ; 11 page(s)
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Keyword:
leisure activities; leisure noise; noise database; noise measurement
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URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/1220388
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Estimating young Australian adults' risk of hearing damage from selected leisure activities
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Music to whose ears? The effect of social norms on young peoples risk perceptions of hearing damage resulting from their music listening behavior
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The Objective-subjective assessment of noise : young adults can estimate loudness of events and lifestyle noise
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Medical practitioners' attitudes to hearing rehabilitation for older adults
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Medical practitioners' attitudes to hearing rehabilitation for older adults
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Evaluation of the NAL-NL1 and the DSL v.4.1 prescriptions for children : paired-comparison intelligibility judgments and functional performance ratings
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