Trevor Cox

For the hockey player, see Trevor Cox (ice hockey).

Trevor Cox is a British academic and science communicator, a Senior Media fellow for EPSRC, and was President of the Institute of Acoustics for the 2010-12 period.

Academia

Cox holds a degree in Physics and a PhD in Acoustics. He entered the field of acoustics because of an interest in music and his science background. He has been an academic in Acoustics Department at the University of Salford since 1995 and currently holds the position of Professor of Acoustic Engineering.

Cox is fascinated by room acoustics, and how places can be designed for intelligible speech (for example, classrooms) and beautiful music (for example, auditoria). His acoustic designs can be found in rooms worldwide and he has co-authored a research book on absorbers and diffusers which is now in its second edition.[1] He is an associate editor for an international journal of acoustics (Acta Acustica united with Acustica).

He uses both qualitative methods (focus groups, interviews, sound-walks) and quantitative methods (perceptual testing in laboratories and over the Internet) to explore responses to sounds from products (such as washing machines), in outdoor spaces (such as cities) and various sound types (such as horrible sounds). He was director of ‘A Noisy Future?’, an ‘Ideas Factory’ research programme run by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council. He was award the Institute of Acoustics's Tyndall Medal in 2004.

Broadcasting

Cox has presented a range of popular science documentaries for BBC Radio 4, BBC Radio 3 and BBC World Service, including Sounds of Science, Aural Architecture, Life’s Soundtrack, Science vs Strad, The Pleasure of Noise, World Musical Instruments, Dragon's Lab, Biomimicry and Save our Sounds. He was co-originator and judge of BBC Radio 4’ ‘So You Want To Be A Scientist?’, a competition to find Britain’s best amateur scientist.

Media coverage

For 15 years Cox has been communicating acoustic engineering to the public working on projects worth over £1 million. He was given the Institute of Acoustics award for promoting acoustics to the public in 2009. He was a finalist at Famelab, a ‘Pop Idol’-style competition to find science communicators for television. He has been involved in projects to produce teaching resources for pupils, the latest having reached more than a quarter of a million pupils. He has developed and presented science shows seen by 15,000 pupils, including appearances in London at the Royal Albert Hall, the Purcell Rooms at the South Bank Centre and the Royal Institution. At one stage, he held the Guinness World Record for the world’s largest whoopee cushion, based on a stage prop used at the “Beautiful Music – Horrible Sounds” show.[2]

He has gained worldwide news coverage for stories such as “Does a duck quack echo?”[3][4] and “The Worst Sound in the World”.[5] He has also investigated the World's scariest scream.[6] In addition, he has appeared in features on BBC1, Teachers TV, Discovery and National Geographic channels, and as an expert in news items on a variety of television and radio channels.

References

  1. "Acoustic Absorbers and Diffusers: Theory, Design and Application, 2nd Edition". Routledge. Retrieved 25 May 2011.
  2. "The Ri makes the world's largest whoopee cushion!". The Royal Institution. 12 February 2009. Retrieved 20 January 2011.
  3. "Science 'quacks' urban duck myth". CNN. 8 September 2003. Retrieved 20 January 2011.
  4. "Sound Science is quackers". BBC. 8 September 2003. Retrieved 20 January 2011.
  5. "World's worst sound? Take baked beans, a bucket and Saturday night". The Guardian. 27 January 2007. Retrieved 20 January 2011.
  6. "Kid British and the science of screaming". The Guardian. 22 September 2009. Retrieved 20 January 2011.

External links

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