luidheids
Luidheids (Dutch for loudness) is the perceptual magnitude of how loud a sound seems to a listener. In acoustics, it is a psychoacoustic quantity that depends on multiple factors beyond the physical sound pressure level, including the sound’s frequency content, duration, and the listener’s hearing state. In practice, loudness is described using scales such as loudness level in phons and loudness in sones, which formalize how perceived loudness changes with frequency and level.
Physical measurements use sound pressure level (SPL) in decibels, but SPL alone does not fully determine loudness.
Phons measure loudness level at a given frequency; for example, 40 phons corresponds to the loudness of
Applications encompass audio engineering, room and environmental acoustics, hearing science, and environmental noise regulation. Loudness perception
Historically, the concept derives from Fletcher and Munson’s equal-loudness experiments in the 1930s, with the phon