'Most Annoying Sound' Is Stomach Turning

ByABC News via logo
January 25, 2007, 8:43 AM

Jan. 25, 2007 — -- From the sound of the alarm clock in the morning and the coffee maker burbling to another workday of traffic, horns, subway trains and voices, noise is unavoidable.

Some of those sounds may amuse us and some may trigger pleasant memories, but many are just downright irritating. One professor at a British university has made a study of the sounds that really get on our nerves.

The Internet study, overseen by England's Salford University lecturer Trevor Cox, took a year to complete and involved people listening to 37 sounds on his Web site, sound101.com, and rating them on a scale of irritability.

Cox says his site received more than a million hits since its inception and the votes were then statistically analyzed using the latest acoustic techniques.

The list includes grating sounds such as fingernails scratching a blackboard, babies crying and the ubiquitous cell phone ring tones.

But at the very top of the list is the Saturday night "out on the razzle, getting spannered and chundering after." Translation: The most irritating sound, according to the online vote, is vomiting.

Cox said, in a way, that the finding made sense.

"I was surprised, yet there was so much data to analyze, and given that the U.K. has the highest rate of binge drinking in Europe, which doesn't really come into the equation really, it was not really that surprising," he said.

Most of the sounds were created by researchers, said Cox. To recreate the sound of someone being sick, an actor was hired to provide the grunting sound and a tin of baked beans was slopped into a bucket.

"We are pre-programmed to be repulsed by horrible things such as vomiting, as it is fundamental to staying alive to avoid nasty stuff but, interestingly, the voting patterns from the sound did not match expectation for a pure 'disgust' reaction," he added.

The list is interesting, but it seems there are more important matters to research. Why study horrible sounds?

"I conducted the experiment in order to explore the public's perceptions of unpleasant sounds and help inform the acoustics industry," Cox said. "I am driven by a scientific curiosity about why people shudder at certain sounds and not othersI think we learn more about the human behavior through how we respond to noises."