Acoustic Treatment is the planned use of absorption, diffusion, bass trapping, and placement to improve how a room sounds.
Example of Acoustic Treatment
A theater can use acoustic panels at reflection points and bass traps in corners to improve dialogue clarity and low-frequency control. In that kind of Davis room acoustics project, the term Acoustic Treatment would describe the planned use of absorption, diffusion, bass trapping, and placement to improve how a room sounds. Davis would use that understanding to account for panel placement, bass control, reflection points, speaker calibration, and room finish coordination, then test the result in the actual room, document the related components, and show the client how to use the feature without needing to manage the technical details behind it.
Related Terms
Frequently Asked Question
What does Acoustic Treatment mean?
Acoustic Treatment means the planned use of absorption, diffusion, bass trapping, and placement to improve how a room sounds. In a Davis Audio & Video project, it matters because the goal is not just adding technology; it is making the system understandable, reliable, and easy to operate.
