Yorkshire Post

The soothing car horn that isn’t so quackers

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A QUACKING car horn designed to alert people to danger while reducing the cacophony of noise on city streets has been developed by sound experts.

The device, sounding a little like a synthesise­d duck, was developed to get attention in a less stressful way than the traditiona­l angry honk.

Scientists returned to the early days of motoring and remodelled the classic Klaxon “ahoo-gah” car horn introduced in 1908. Different sound variations were tested on 100 volunteers before deciding on the pedestrian-friendly “quack”.

Lead researcher Professor Myung-Jin Bae, from Soongsil University in Seoul, South Korea, said: “In our study we used the existing historic Klaxon sound source, but made some modificati­on concerning its volume and rhythm with duration time by adding a power controller. Our new Klaxon sound can immediatel­y alert the pedestrian­s of the danger while also reducing the unpleasant­ness and stress of the sound.”

The aim was to find a sound that could be noticed without being too irritating.

Test listeners were asked to evaluate candidate car horn sounds for perceptual qualities such as stress and loudness.

Their answers resulted in a “mean option score” (MOS) ranking sounds on from bad to excellent on a five-point scale.

The Klaxon had the advantage of making a loud noise at low power, but its volume could not be easily controlled, said Bae.

A less startling car horn could also contribute to road safety by being less distractin­g to drivers, said the researcher­s at a meeting in Boston, US.

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