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[Articles & News] Fingernails on a Chalkboard: Why This Sound Gives You the Shivers?

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Post time: 17-5-2018 04:03:27 Posted From Mobile Phone
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▼ If you're like most people, you probably can't stand the sound of fingernails scraping across a blackboard. You're probably cringing just thinking about it. This ear-piercing noise is so universally disliked, perhaps it's no surprise that dozens of scientists have researched why it evokes such a visceral reaction.
Overall, research shows that this ear-splitting noise has the same frequency as that of a crying baby and a human scream, indicating that these sounds are tied to survival. For instance, people attuned to these frequencies may rescue a crying infant sooner, improving the baby's longevity.
One study has suggested that the shape of our ear canals, as well as our own perceptions, are to blame for our distaste of shrill sounds.
The study's participants rated their discomfort to various unpleasant noises, such as a fork scraping against a plate or Styrofoam squeaking. The two sounds rated as the most unpleasant, they said, were fingernails scratching on a chalkboardand a piece of chalk running against slate.
The researchers then created variations of these two sounds by modifying certain frequency ranges, removing the harmonic portions (or other concordant tones). They told half of the listeners the true source of the sounds, and the other half that the sounds came from pieces of contemporary music. Finally, they played back the new sounds for the participants, while monitoring certain indicators of stress, such as heart rate, blood pressure and the electrical conductivity of skin.
They found that the offensive soundschanged the listeners' skin conductivity significantly, showing that they really do cause a measureable, physical stress reaction.
The most painful frequencies were not the highest or lowest, but instead those that were between 2,000 and 4,000 Hertz. The human ear is most sensitive to sounds that fall in this frequency range, said study researcher Michael Oehler, a professor of media and music management at Macromedia University of Applied Sciences in Germany.
Oehler pointed out that the shape of the human ear canal may have evolved to amplify frequencies that are important for communication and survival. Thus, a painfully amplified chalkboard screech is just an unfortunate side effect of this (mostly) beneficial development. "But this is really just speculation," Oehler told Live Science in 2011, when the research was presented at a meeting for the Acoustical Society of America. "The only thing we can definitively say is where we found the unpleasant frequencies." Listeners in the study, Oehler said, rated a sound as more pleasant if they thought it was pulled from a musical composition. (Though this didn't fool their bodies, as participants in both study groups expressed the same changes in skin conductivity.) The implication, then, is that chalkboard screeches may not irk people so much if they didn't already think the sound was incredibly annoying. (▪ ▪ ▪)

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Post time: 17-5-2018 05:52:15
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I never tried..
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Post time: 17-5-2018 09:56:51
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Very interesting. never knew it could promote so much analysis and research.
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Post time: 17-5-2018 10:52:58
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Hahah. Such an interesting information about regular cringeworthy thing.
Add another such sound, pricking thru a thrmocoal sheet. Similarly annoying it is.
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Post time: 17-5-2018 12:52:57
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I hate the sound. It does something to me, why, I do not know.
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Post time: 17-5-2018 14:05:59
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First time came to know about such study. Thanks a lot.
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Post time: 17-5-2018 22:39:36
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I always felt it’s just me who’s feeling it. This sound really irritates me, and it’s not just fingernails, at times it’s even a chalk. I even remember instances when I was told to write something on board and how annoyed I was then. Nice info...
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Post time: 19-5-2018 07:39:38
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I really hate this sound, it is annoying to me.
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Post time: 28-5-2018 05:55:40
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Aha! A research article on what I thought was my neurological condition!
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Post time: 29-5-2018 14:24:04
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Absolutely- one of my pet hates
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