ANSI S12.6-2008 pdf download Methods for Measuring the Real-Ear Attenuation of Hearing Protectors
3 Terms and definitions For the purposes of this standard, the terms and definitions given in ANSI S1.1, ANSI S3.20, and the following apply:
3.1 amplitude-sensitive hearing protection device. A hearing protector, also referred to as a level-dependent hearing protector, that is designed to exhibit a change in attenuation as a function of sound level.
3.2 earmuff. A hearing protector usually comprised of a headband and earcups with a soft cushion to seal against the head, intended to fit against the pinna (supra-aural) or the sides of the head around the pinna (circumaural). The earcups may also be held in position by attachment arms mounted on a hard hat or hard cap.
3.3 earplug. A hearing protector that is inserted into the earcanal. 3.4 hearing protection device (HPD). A personal device, also referred to as a hearing protector, worn as a barrier to reduce the sound level entering the earcanal in order to diminish the harmful auditory and/or annoying subjective effects of sound.
3.5 helmet. A device, sometimes functioning as a hearing protector, which usually covers a substantial portion of the head, that may include internally mounted earcups and/or earplugs.
3.6 occluded threshold of hearing. At a specific frequency, the minimum effective sound pressure level of the signal that is capable of evoking an auditory sensation in a specified fraction of the trials when the hearing protector under test is worn.
3.7 open threshold of hearing. At a specific frequency, the minimum effective sound pressure level of the signal that is capable of evoking an auditory sensation in a specified fraction of the trials when a hearing protector is not worn (i.e., ears unoccluded).
3.8 passive hearing protection device. A hearing protector that relies solely on its mechanical elements to block or otherwise control the transmission of sound to the auditory system.
3.9 pink noise. Noise for which the spectrum density varies as the inverse of frequency.
3.10 random incidence. Incidence of sound waves from all directions with equal probability.
3.11 real-ear attenuation at threshold (REAT). At a specific frequency, the mean value (in decibels) of the occluded threshold of hearing minus the open threshold of hearing on all trials under otherwise identical test conditions, either for a single listener or averaged across a group of listeners.
3.12 reference point. A fixed spatial location within the test chamber at which the midpoint of a line connecting the test subjects’ earcanal openings is located for REAT measurements, and likewise the point to which all objective measurements of the sound field characteristics are referenced.
3.13 requester. The party submitting a hearing protection product and fitting instructions for testing. NOTE When the investigator is evaluating hearing protectors other than for an entity external to the laboratory, the requester is considered to be the investigator conducting the research. 3.14 reverberation time. Of an enclosure, for a stated frequency or frequency band, the time required for the level of the time-mean-square sound pressure in the enclosure to decrease by 60 dB after the source has stopped. Unit, second (s).
ANSI S12.6-2008 pdf download
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