[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"external-oc-417":3},{"payload":4,"id":7,"user":8,"level":14,"course":15,"activity":16,"activity_slug":17,"title":6,"topic":18,"tone":19,"stats":20,"created":23,"score":24,"is_favorite":25,"public":26,"is_external":25},{"text":5,"title":6},"In many modern cities, silence has become so rare (0) THAT people often fail to notice its absence until they leave the centre behind. Urban planners have long been aware (1) .......... the psychological effects of constant noise, yet only recently have they begun to treat quietness as something worth designing (2) .......... rather than merely hoping for. Research suggests that people recover more quickly from stress when they spend time in places (3) .......... traffic, machinery and electronic alerts are less intrusive. It is not simply a matter of volume, (4) .......... of unpredictability: sudden sounds demand attention and prevent the mind from settling. For this reason, some architects argue that public spaces should be planned in such a way (5) .......... unwanted noise is absorbed or redirected. Measures of this kind are expensive, and critics question whether city authorities should invest in them when there are other problems to deal (6) .......... . However, supporters insist that the issue is not a luxury but a public-health concern, one (7) .......... consequences extend far beyond mere discomfort. If cities are to remain liveable, they must be designed not only for movement and efficiency, but also for the moments in (8) .......... people can pause and think.","Urban Silence",417,{"id":9,"username":10,"first_name":11,"last_name":12,"image":13},21949,"bejenaru-alexandru","Bejenaru","Alexandru","https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/a/ACg8ocLEfT94mQjdTYKsjmOKyOz7WELGupzbSWQF1f1WKNbfENvPog=s96-c","C1","Reading","Open Cloze","open-cloze","Make it hard but similar to the Cambridge exam","Formal",{"times_played":21,"num_favorites":22},4,0,"2026-04-21T08:36:57",null,false,true]