Single and Combined Effects of Air, Road, and Rail Traffic Noise on Sleep and Recuperation
Adult
Male
Adolescent
Aircraft
Polysomnography
memory
Young Adult
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
arousal
Memory
Surveys and Questionnaires
heart rate
Humans
Railroads
Aged
reaction time
traffic noise
aircraft noise
health
Middle Aged
railway noise
3. Good health
awakening
Noise, Transportation
road traffic noise
Female
Arousal
Noise
Sleep
Automobiles
Psychomotor Performance
DOI:
10.1093/sleep/34.1.11
Publication Date:
2017-02-05T15:23:03Z
AUTHORS (3)
ABSTRACT
Traffic noise disturbs sleep and may impair recuperation. There is limited information on single and combined effects of air, road, and rail traffic noise on sleep and recuperation.Repeated measures.Polysomnographic laboratory study.72 healthy subjects, mean ± standard deviation 40 ± 13 years, range 18-71 years, 32 male.Exposure to 40, 80, or 120 rail, road, and/or air traffic noise events.Subjects were investigated for 11 consecutive nights, which included 8 noise exposure nights and one noise-free control night. Noise effects on sleep structure and continuity were subtle, even in nights with combined exposure, most likely because of habituation and an increase in arousal thresholds both within and across nights. However, cardiac arousals did not habituate across nights. Noise exposure significantly affected subjective assessments of sleep quality and recuperation, whereas objective performance was unaffected, except for a small increase in mean PVT reaction time (+4 ms, adjusted P < 0.05). Road traffic noise led to the strongest changes in sleep structure and continuity, whereas subjective assessments of sleep were worse after nights with air and rail traffic noise exposure. In contrast to daytime annoyance, cortical arousal probabilities and cardiac responses were significantly lower for air than for road and rail traffic noise (all P < 0.0001). These differences were explained by sound pressure level rise time and high frequency (> 3 kHz) noise event components.Road, rail, and air traffic noise differentially affect objective and subjective assessments of sleep. Differences in the degree of noise-induced sleep fragmentation between traffic modes were explained by the specific spectral and temporal composition of noise events, indicating potential targets for active and passive noise control. Field studies are needed to validate our findings in a setting with higher ecologic validity.
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