Dr. Schomer has extensive
experience, publications, and patents in the areas of environmental
noise and its assessment, human and community response to noise,
instrumentation and methodology for the measurement and monitoring of
noise, architectural acoustics, and acoustical measurements of building
parameters. He is a consultant to industry and government, an
adjunct Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering (Acoustics) and
member of the graduate faculty of the University of Illinois, and a
former research leader in acoustics for the Construction Engineering
Research Laboratory. His recognition by his peers as an
international leader in the area of environmental noise is demonstrated
by his chapters in reference books, his 35 refereed publications, his
leadership in Standards organizations and professional societies, and
his awards and honors.
As an
international leader in the area of environmental noise, Dr. Schomer is
Standards Director for the Acoustical Society of
America, chairperson of the United States delegation to
International Organization for Standardization (ISO) Acoustics and Noise
committees, chairperson of the American National Standards Committee
dealing with noise, chairperson of the ISO working groups which deal
with environmental noise and with impulsive noise measurement,
chairperson of the American National Standards Institute working group
which deals with environmental noise, and he is the United States
representative to the International Organization for Standardization in
the areas of aircraft noise and impulsive sources. He is
chairperson of the Acoustical Society of America Committee on Standards,
a member of the Society of Automotive Engineers Aircraft Noise
Committee, a principle contributor to current efforts in the area of
standardizing airport noise monitoring, and former vice-president for
membership and twice a member of the board of the Institute of Noise
Control Engineering.
Dr. Schomer has
37 years of experience dealing with noise measurement and affects of
noise on people and communities. This experience includes blast
and mining noise, gunfire noise, airport, aircraft, helicopter,
construction and traffic noise, general industrial and urban noise, and
the audibility of signals and warning devices. The citation for his
selection as a Fellow of the Acoustical Society of America references
his studies on community response to noise, and most of his work with
the National Academy of Science has been concerned with noise
assessment.