Measuring Sound Absorption: The Hundred-Year Debate on the Reverberation Chamber Method
Acoustics Today, Vol. 19, Iss. 3, pgs. 13-21

 

Jamilla Balint
jba@akustik.rwth-aachen.de

Institute for Hearing Technology and Acoustics
RWTH Aachen University
52074 Aachen, Germany

Jamilla Balint is a postdoc at RWTH Aachen University, Aachen, Germany. She received her PhD in acoustics from the Graz University of Technology, Graz, Austria, and her MSc degree in electrical and audio engineering from the University for Music and Performing Art Graz and the Graz University of Technology. She was a visiting researcher at the Technical University of Denmark, Kongens Lyngby. For her PhD, she investigated the reasons for the nonlinearity of sound decays and the consequences of absorption measurements in reverberation chambers. Currently, her research focuses on interdisciplinary collaborations in acoustics, psychology, and virtual reality for auditory cognition experiments.

Marco Berzborn
mbe@akustik.rwth-aachen.de

Institute for Hearing Technology and Acoustics
RWTH Aachen University
52074 Aachen, Germany

Marco Berzborn holds a MSc degree in electrical engineering and is a doctoral candidate at RWTH Aachen University, Aachen, Germany. His thesis focuses on the spatiotemporal analysis and quantification of sound fields in reverberation rooms. Further research interests include microphone and loudspeaker array-based measurement methods of directionally dependent reverberation as well as inverse estimation methods for sound absorption.

Mélanie Nolan
melnola@dtu.dk

Acoustic Technology
Department of Electrical and Photonics Engineering
Technical University of Denmark
2800 Kongens Lyngby, Denmark

Mélanie Nolan is a postdoc at the Technical University of Denmark (DTU), Kongens Lyngby. She received her PhD in acoustics from DTU and worked as a postdoctoral researcher at Saint-Gobain Ecophon, Hyllinge, Sweden. She was awarded the F. V. Hunt Postdoctoral Research Fellowship in Acoustics from the Acoustical Society of America and held a postdoctoral research associate position at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, New York. She was recently granted an individual postdoctoral fellowship from the Danish Council for Independent Research and is currently visiting the Laboratoire d’Acoustique de l’Université du Mans, Le Mans, France. Her research focuses on measuring techniques for the characterization of sound absorption and porous media.

Michael Vorländer
mvo@akustik.rwth-aachen.de

Institute for Hearing Technology and Acoustics
RWTH Aachen University
52074 Aachen, Germany

Michael Vorländer studied physics in Aachen, Germany, where he finished his doctoral degree in 1989 with a thesis in room acoustical computer simulation. He has worked in various fields of acoustics such as psychoacoustics, electroacoustics, and architectural acoustics. Since 1996, he has been a professor at the Institute for Hearing Technology and Acoustics, RWTH Aachen University, Germany. He served in several organization Aachen, as president (European Acoustics Association [EAA] 2004-2007; International Commission for Acoustics [ICA] 2011-2013) and as an Executive Council member (Acoustical Society of America 2017-2019). His research focus is auralization.