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Mobile phones: A trade-off between speech intelligibility and exposure to noise levels and to radio-frequency electromagnetic fields.

Authors :
Thielens, Arno
Bockstael, Annelies
Declerck, Sofie
Aminzadeh, Reza
Aerts, Sam
Botteldooren, Dick
Martens, Luc
Joseph, Wout
Source :
Environmental Research. Aug2019, Vol. 175, p1-10. 10p.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

When making phone calls, cellphone and smartphone users are exposed to radio-frequency (RF) electromagnetic fields (EMFs) and sound pressure simultaneously. Speech intelligibility during mobile phone calls is related to the sound pressure level of speech relative to potential background sounds and also to the RF-EMF exposure, since the signal quality is correlated with the RF-EMF strength. Additionally, speech intelligibility, sound pressure level, and exposure to RF-EMFs are dependent on how the call is made (on speaker, held at the ear, or with headsets). The relationship between speech intelligibility, sound exposure, and exposure to RF-EMFs is determined in this study. To this aim, the transmitted RF-EMF power was recorded during phone calls made by 53 subjects in three different, controlled exposure scenarios: calling with the phone at the ear, calling in speaker-mode, and calling with a headset. This emitted power is directly proportional to the exposure to RF EMFs and is translated into specific absorption rate using numerical simulations. Simultaneously, sound pressure levels have been recorded and speech intelligibility has been assessed during each phone call. The results show that exposure to RF-EMFs, quantified as the specific absorption in the head, will be reduced when speaker-mode or a headset is used, in comparison to calling next to the ear. Additionally, personal exposure to sound pressure is also found to be highest in the condition where the phone is held next to the ear. On the other hand, speech perception is found to be the best when calling with a phone next to the ear in comparison to the other studied conditions, when background noise is present. • First time measurement of simultaneous head exposure to RF-EMF and sound pressure during smartphone usage. • Three use cases are compared: smartphone use at the ear, in speaker mode, and with a headset. • We demonstrate that exposure to RF-EMF and sound pressure is highest when a phone held at the ear during calls. • Speech intelligibility is more favourable when the phone is held at the ear in different background noise conditions. • We demonstrate that reductions in exposure might come at a cost of speech intelligibility during wireless phone calls. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00139351
Volume :
175
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Environmental Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
136935585
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envres.2019.05.006