Abstract. Coastal erosion is more severe due to human-induced coastal zone development in addition to natural climate change. Anthropogenic development affecting coastal erosion is divided into three areas; watersheds, coastal waters, and coastal land areas. In this study, the ultimate effect of anthropogenic development on changes in the amount of sand, changes in the littoral drift, and changes in shoreline variability in these three planar areas is expressed as quantitative risk potential of beach erosion damage, defined as a change in the planar surface of the sand beach. The change in the amount of sand is due to the law of conservation of matter, and the littoral drift characteristic of sand is interpreted as a change in the main crest line at the breaking point, and the response characteristics of shoreline position is interpreted as change in the erodibility and recovery characteristics of beach sand. This quantitative method was applied to Bongpo-Cheonjin Beach of erosion grade D (frequency of erosion damage within 5 years) in Gangwon-do, Korea to identify the cause of erosion and evaluate the detailed applicability of this method. It was interpreted using a series of aerial photographs taken from 1972 to 2017 and survey data obtained from the erosion rating project started in 2010. In the erosion rating project, the GPS shoreline survey of 4 times per year and the sand sampling at the swash zones of base line at 150 m intervals are mainly carried out. We showed the feasibility of methodology evaluating the risk potential for beach erosion proposed in this study, and it can be expected that this method will be applicable to eroded beaches elsewhere.
This paper presents an experimental study of the factors modulating the urgency perception of voice alarm generated by concatenative synthesizers. Four experiments were conducted using psycho-physical approach in which 112 participants made magnitude estimation for urgency perception of various voice alarm stimuli.Experiment 1 identified 6 acoustic and non-acoustic factors modulating the perceived urgency of synthesized voice alarm. Experiment 2, 3 and 4 quantified the relations between the objective changes in each of the quantifiable parameters and the subjective changes in urgency perception. This research has implications for the design and implementation of synthesized voice alarm systems where urgency mapping is required.
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