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Lots of modelling and freedom to explore – summer job in the Acoustics Lab

How could you listen to only one sound in a noisy room? How does your voice change when you shout into the wind? Michael McCrea and Rapolas Daugintis, the summer workers at the Acoustics Lab, are looking for answers to these questions
911/The Acoustics Lab/Michael McCrea and Rapolas Daugintis/image: Ira Matilainen
Rapolas Daugintis (left) and Michael McCrea in the Acoustics Lab's anechoic chamber. Image: Ira Matilainen/911

Most of the 911 students usually spend their summer away from campus. Rapolas Daugintis and Michael McCrea, master's students in Acoustics and Audio Technology, got to know more about working in the academic world when they got a chance to spend the summer in the Acoustics Lab working on interesting research projects. The School of Electrical Engineering hires tens of students for a range of summer jobs every year.

Have you ever noticed how your voice sounds different when its windy? Rapolas is researching how the wind affects how we hear our own voice. The research is a continuation of Professor Ville Pulkki’s previous research, where he studied how the wind affects how others hear us.

‘Right now, I’m modelling a human head and how the wind affects sound. Anyone can try themselves, for example, when they are cycling on a bridge or some other windy place to shout in different directions and listen to their own voice,’ Rapolas says.

Rapolas worked previously as an acoustics consultant and he thinks it has been interesting to see the difference between the corporate and academic worlds.

‘In general, it has been interesting to get to know how the academic research team works and exchange knowledge with the team; when you are telling someone about your work, they might suggest you to read some research papers or offer their help,’ he continues.

Simulating cocktail parties

Michael’s research project is related to a phenomenon called the “cocktail party effect”, which is used to describe the situation where a person is able to listen the voice he wants even if there are so many different sounds coming from different directions. 

‘I’m trying to figure out how we can detect where the sounds are coming from but also isolating the sounds we don’t want to hear. So, right now I am simulating rooms that have multiple sound sources and microphones that are listening to them,’ Michael says.

Michael came to study in Aalto after doing his bachelor’s degree in the Technology and Arts programme in the University of Washington. After finishing his undergraduate studies, he stayed at the university as a research scientist and got more and more interested in sound technology and especially 3D sound.

‘Over the years as I read research papers and tried to implement different techniques, the more and more of them were from 911. Especially the ones that resonated with me the most. It has been meaningful for me to work with the people who wrote those research papers,’ Michael says.

911/the Acoustics Lab/Michael McCrea and Rapolas Daugintis/photo: Ira Matilainen

Plenty of room for new research

The research in the field is definitely not done, and the demand for audio technology and acoustics expertise is growing every day. Michael and Rapolas both have lots of topics they find interesting, so what would they like to do in the future?

‘I’m still searching for my exact field of interest but there are interesting topics to research. For example, there is still some research to be done on how we simulate acoustics correctly in different spaces and especially outdoors because it’s such a massive area,’ Rapolas says.

Michael has found his passion in spatial sound and so-called near field. He already has a clear vision of what he would like to study in the future.

‘Because of my background in art, I would like to contribute to making software developments and tools available for artists and designers,’ he says.

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