Unmasking the effects of masking on performance: The potential of multiple-voice masking in the office environment
Journal article, 2015

Broadband noise is often used as a masking sound to combat the negative consequences of background speech on performance in open-plan offices. As office workers generally dislike broadband noise, it is important to find alternatives that are more appreciated while being at least not less effective. The purpose of experiment 1 was to compare broadband noise with two alternatives - multiple voices and water waves - in the context of a serial short-term memory task. A single voice impaired memory in comparison with silence, but when the single voice was masked with multiple voices, performance was on level with silence. Experiment 2 explored the benefits of multiple-voice masking in more detail (by comparing one voice, three voices, five voices, and seven voices) in the context of word processed writing (arguably a more office-relevant task). Performance (i.e., writing fluency) increased linearly from worst performance in the one-voice condition to best performance in the seven-voice condition. Psychological mechanisms underpinning these effects are discussed.

Author

M. Keus Van De Poll

University of Gävle

Johannes Carlsson

Chalmers, Civil and Environmental Engineering, Applied Acoustics

J. E. Marsh

University of Central Lancashire

R. Ljung

University of Gävle

J. Odelius

Luleå University of Technology

S. J. Schlittmeier

Catholic University of Eichstätt-Ingolstadt

G. Sundin

Norconsult AB

P. Sörqvist

University of Gävle

Journal of the Acoustical Society of America

0001-4966 (ISSN) 1520-8524 (eISSN)

Vol. 138 2 807-816

Subject Categories (SSIF 2011)

Fluid Mechanics and Acoustics

DOI

10.1121/1.4926904

More information

Latest update

11/16/2023