Is 115-120 dB Loud Noise Harmful to Dogs and Humans?

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Loud noises, such as those produced by horns at 115-120 dB, raise concerns regarding their potential harm to both dogs and humans. Dogs have a greater sensitivity to sound and a wider frequency range, which could mean they experience pain or discomfort at lower volumes than humans. Chronic exposure to high decibel levels can lead to hearing damage, with guidelines suggesting a maximum of 15 minutes of unprotected exposure to 115 dB for humans. The discussion highlights the need for further research into the pain thresholds and auditory responses of dogs compared to humans. Ultimately, while dogs can tolerate loud sounds, their physiological differences may put them at risk for injury from such noise levels.
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I've been watching a discussion on another forum regarding the use of loud horns to deter dogs from chasing bikes. Some dissenters say that it is cruel since dogs can "hear so much better than humans" and such loud sounds can injure them. My question is, is it better stated that dogs have a greater range and sensitivity (lower threshold) for sound that humans do and they aren't necessarily going to be negatively impacted by an equivalently loud noise? In other words if I'm exposed to a 115-120 db blast (roughly what the horn in question can produce) am I less, more, or just as likely to suffer injury than a dog exposed to the same noise? Any insights?
 
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Thanks, cronxeh, I found that one myself after posting the question. I'm still not sure I'm convinced that the dog would feel more pain than a human, or feel pain sooner with an increasing volume. Obviously dogs have a wider range of frequencies that they can hear compared to humans, so they most likely have hair cells that respond to those frequencies and/or the shape of the cochlea facilitates reception of said frequencies. Is the "volume sensitivity" of the system a fixed range? In other words, if you make the ear more sensitive to lower volumes, do you also lower the threshold at which discomfort is reached? I guess I need to do some more digging, maybe look for auditory startle responses in dogs versus humans.
 
I think there is some serious scientific inquiry that needs to be done into that

I don't even know how to begin doing the amplitude vs pain threshold test on the dogs. Perhaps using EEG? I guess you would need to compare EEG of a pain stimuli (an electric shock?) and compare that with dB stimuli to draw a conclusive result, but either way I have a dog and Technics RP DH 1200 headphones, but no EEG, so I can't really help you on this one, DOc :biggrin:

Oh and I'm pretty sure just by their physiology their sensitivity should go down vs frequency or should raise but definitely not stay constant
 
The other issue is pain vs damage. One may experience pain but not neccessarily accrue damage. Typical hearing damage occurs during chronic exposure to noise, of course the louder the noise the less exposure one needs to get damage. The horn used on dogs puts out about 115 dB which the American Academy of Otology - Head and Neck Surgery http://www.entnet.org/healthinfo/hearing/noise_hearing.cfm" equates to a car horn or rock concert and allows a maximum of 15minutes of unprotected exposure per day (when was the last concert you went to that was only 15 min?:bugeye: :cry: ). So in terms of humans, the horn blast is probably OK, but if for some reason the dog has a lower pain/damage threshold, then maybe it could result in injury. The search continues...
 
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Dogs themselves can bark pretty loud when they feel like it, so it can't cause them that much discomfort surely? Just a thought.
 
matthyaouw said:
Dogs themselves can bark pretty loud when they feel like it, so it can't cause them that much discomfort surely? Just a thought.

I think mechanically vibrating sound waves would be outgoing from the dogs and due to their shape the amount of vibration reaching their own ears would be in 80% range at most
 

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