The Hearing Knowledge Hub

  • Articles

    Age related hearing loss in other mammals.

    It’s reassuring to learn that other mammals seem to lose their hearing in older age, much like humans do, but also find ways to adapt to their situation. Scientists have discovered that some bats experience age-related hearing loss – but may have found a way around it. A study of wild Egyptian fruit bats revealed a clear age-related hearing loss that, just as in humans, was particularly pronounced at higher sound frequencies – exactly those pitches that the bats need for echolocation to orientate themselves in their environment and to seek out prey. The fruit bats live in large, noisy colonies which means these animals are continuously exposed to over…

  • Articles

    How to cure those annoying ear-worms!

    We’ve all had them – those annoying song riffs that you just can’t shift from your brain no matter what. But what makes one song more annoyingly catchy than another? And how can you rid yourself of one of these ‘earworms’ when you get one? Professor Emery Schubert, a researcher from the University of New South Wales in Australia, has found that earworms (‘involuntary musical imagery’) get into our brains when we’re relaxed. And certain songs will be more successful at this for key reasons. Earworms tend to be the choruses of songs as they’re repeated throughout the song. However, an earworm is also more likely if you recently heard…

  • Articles

    2 million Britons currently work in harmful levels of noise

    We were alarmed to recently read that more than 2 million Britons currently work in harmful levels of noise and are at risk of developing noise-induced hearing loss. Why is there still such a problem with noise-induced hearing loss 17 years after the Control of Noise at Work Regulations were brought in? The piece by Dr David Greenberg on the British Safety Council’s website explained how large numbers of construction and manufacturing workers and ex-military personnel have a hearing impairment. Noise induced hearing loss is the source of many thousands of insurance claims, and is the most commonly reported occupational disease in Europe. And it is entirely preventable. So why is still…

  • The Hearing Clinic

    Computers eavesdrop on fishy love songs.

    It seems that, when the time is right, fish sing songs of love to attract a mate. And they don’t tend to enjoy big solos – preferring to vocalise in choruses which can even be heard from land at low frequencies.  But it’s not just other fish who are listening. Biologists in California are eavesdropping on fish populations in the nearby Pacific Ocean to try to identify spawning seasons with a view to preserving fish populations and protecting marine health. Capturing the recordings was just the beginning. Highly skilled acousticians would then need to listen to weeks or months of recordings to pick out the fish chorusing sounds – a process…

  • Articles

    AI – what we can gain for hearing aids.

    You can’t read the news or switch on the telly at the moment without hearing about artificial intelligence (AI). Depending on your point of view, the buzz around AI is either alarming or exciting as experts debate its potential to alter so many aspects of our daily lives and even potentially eliminate certain jobs. What is AI? AI is the method by which a computer is able to mimic human cognitive functions, such as learning and problem-solving. The computer analyses and learns from data through specifically designed algorithms. AI has actually been with us for quite a few years (Siri and Alexa, the virtual personal assistants, are AI features). And…

  • Articles

    New propeller design to reduce noise pollution

    Boats and aircraft still use propeller designs that are hundreds or even thousands of years old. However, that could be set to change thanks to a new design being implemented by the aviation and marine sectors. A team from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the US that has been working on a new drone has found that adapting the traditional shape of the propellers into a twisted ring, or twisted-toroid, drastically reduces the noise from the drone blades. The sound created is more like a rushing breeze than a propeller, making it far less intrusive. What’s more, the new design also produces more thrust. These benefits are equally apparent…

  • Articles

    Can snakes hear you scream?

      Sight and taste are the main ways snakes sense their environment, but hearing is a more important element than previously thought. Snakes can feel sound vibrations through the ground (called tactile sensing) but new research shows that they can also hear sounds through the air, like we can, and different species respond in different ways. Australia is a country well known for its variety of impressive and mostly lethal snakes so it seems apt that the new research has been published by a team at the University of Queensland. The team tested 19 different snakes from seven species in a soundproof room where they were able to move freely.…

  • Articles

    New rapid DNA to prevent hearing loss in newborn babies

      The eagle-eyed of you may remember that, back in July last year, we blogged about a new genetic test being trialled by some NHS hospitals that could protect the hearing of newborn babies who are vulnerable to a particular antibiotic.  One in 500 babies born in the UK has a gene that can lead to permanent hearing loss if they’re given the common emergency antibiotic, Gentamicin. Gentamicin is life-saving and the first-choice antibiotic if a newborn develops a serious bacterial infection. It’s safe for most people, but some 180 babies in England each year suffer hearing loss as they have the gene and are given this drug. Thanks to…

  • Articles,  The Hearing Clinic

    Your Life, with Subtitles

    A new tech breakthrough is helping to better connect deaf and hearing impaired people with friends, family and the world around them. The XRAI Glass app uses augmented reality to convert audio to visuals via smart glasses. The user wears a pair of smart glasses that provide subtitles of what’s going on around them in real time. The user simply reads the subtitles which appear instantaneously in front of their eyes. The glasses look like slightly larger-than-average sunglasses, and users can even have their custom prescription spectacle lenses inserted into the XRAI Glass frames. The glasses connect to the XRAI Glass app on the user’s smartphone which will even translate…

  • Articles,  The Hearing Clinic

    Can the brain be trained to hear sound in background noise?

    Scientists studying the brains of old and young mice believe that the brain might be trained to filter out background sound, potentially helping to solve the challenges people with a hearing impairment experience when listening to speech in background noise. Researchers from the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine found that old mice were less able than young mice to suppress actively firing brain cells in the midst of ambient noise making it difficult for the brain to focus on one type of sound — such as spoken words — and filter out surrounding noise. Researchers recorded the activity of 8,000 brain cells, or neurons, in the auditory cortex brain…

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