The Embarrassment Score looks at one specific question inside public self-consciousness and acoustic embarrassment: what do your embarrassment actually add up to? Instead of a vague feeling, it converts the everyday signals you already notice — formality of setting, noise loudness, distance to nearest person, how quiet is space? — into a single score you can track, compare and act on.
The model is built on acoustics, the spotlight effect and social-attention research, the same foundation as our flagship moment calculator. Each input is weighted by how strongly that factor predicts real outcomes in the research; the formula and every weight are published below, so you can see exactly why your score is what it is — and argue with it if you like.
Adjust the sliders to match your situation honestly and the score updates live, along with the strongest factors pushing it up or down. Like everything on Quirkulator, the computation runs entirely in your browser: nothing you enter is ever transmitted or stored.
The formula
w1·formality- Formality of the setting (weight +0.6)
w2·loudness- Noise loudness — 0 = barely audible, 10 = echoing (weight +1.1)
w3·proximity- Distance to nearest person (weight -0.6)
w4·ambient- How quiet is the space? — 0 = loud venue, 10 = silent room (weight +1)
w5·self consc- Your self-consciousness baseline (weight +0.9)
σ, μ- Sigmoid squash to 0–100, centered on typical values
How it works, step by step
- Rate each input honestly — the Embarrassment score is only as good as your self-assessment.
- Watch the live score and note which factor the result panel names as your strongest driver.
- Read your band below — each range comes with a concrete recommended next step.
- Change one input to simulate a change in behavior and see how much the score moves — that sensitivity is the real insight.
- Re-take the assessment after a few weeks; trends across readings mean far more than any single score.
Worked examples
A low-signal scenario
With every input set well below typical — the quiet version of this situation — the model returns 13, landing in the “Nobody heard” band. Acoustically and socially negligible. Whatever embarrassment you feel is happening in an audience of one: you.
A high-signal scenario
Push the main drivers well above typical and the score rises to 95 — the “Acoustic event” band. Maximum differential, maximum audience — a legitimately loud moment. It will still be forgotten by everyone but you; deploy humor, exit gracefully, and let the calculator absolve you.
How to read your score
Frequently asked questions
Why does the calculator ask about humor?
Self-directed humor is the single strongest buffer in embarrassment research — it converts the audience from witnesses into co-conspirators. The weight on that slider is earned.
What is the best in-the-moment recovery?
Own it lightly: a brief smile or acknowledgment outperforms both freezing and fleeing in observed likability studies. For repeatable noises (squeaky shoes), changing gait or surface beats hoping.
What does the Embarrassment Score actually measure?
The gap between how visible the moment felt and how visible it was — modeled from acoustics (loudness against ambient noise), audience geometry, and your own self-consciousness baseline. Spoiler: the felt number is usually much higher.
Why do quiet spaces make everything worse?
Perceived offense scales with the decibel differential above ambient noise, not absolute loudness. A 60 dB squeak vanishes in a food court and detonates in a library — same shoe, different physics.
Do people really notice as much as it feels like?
No — this is the spotlight effect, one of social psychology’s most replicated findings. Observers notice roughly half of what actors predict, and forget it almost immediately. The calculator’s output leans on that correction.
How long do bystanders remember an embarrassing noise?
Attention research suggests single acoustic anomalies hold attention 1–2 seconds and decay from memory within a minute. Your rumination is the only place the moment persists.