TY  - JOUR
KW  - Acoustic comfort
KW  -  
Adaptation
KW  -  
Tolerance
KW  -  
Thematic analysis
KW  -  
Expert interviews
KW  -  
Qualitative
A1  - Dicle, Seda Yuksel
A1  - Aletta, Francesco
A1  - Kang, Jian
JF  - Applied Acoustics
SN  - 0003-682X
PB  - Elsevier BV
UR  - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apacoust.2025.110642
ID  - discovery10205974
N2  - The ability of individuals to adapt to environmental conditions, known as environmental adaptation, reflects their capacity to modify behaviors and physical surroundings to better align with external demands. In thermal comfort assessments, this adaptation process is evaluated using the adaptive thermal comfort model. Similarly, the relationship between individuals? adaptability and their perception of acoustic environments is also considered to play a significant role in acoustic comfort assessments. Based on this foundation, this study investigates the development and assessment of an adaptive acoustic comfort model, following on its initial definition: ?a model that relates indoor acoustic conditions to outdoor ones, moderated by other environmental, contextual, and personal factors.? Through expert interviews, the research aims to develop a preliminary framework for assessing adaptive acoustic comfort, highlighting the importance of environmental adaptation and user tolerance. This framework includes the identification of assessment methods, acoustic indicators, and adaptive model variables necessary for testing the model?s existence and effectiveness in acoustic evaluations. By examining acoustic comfort from an adaptive perspective, the study recommends evaluating indoor acoustic comfort in relation to outdoor conditions. To capture variability in user responses, it suggests having real-world data alongside laboratory studies using specific acoustic indicators. Additionally, the model framework emphasizes the necessity of evaluating personal, environmental, and building-related variables through various developed adaptive models.
N1  - © 2025 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Y1  - 2025/05/14/
AV  - public
VL  - 235
TI  - A framework for developing adaptive acoustic comfort: Insights from expert interviews
ER  -