Daily Mail on MSN
A bionic brain implant may soon replace old-fashioned hearing aids
A brain-controlled implant may boost hearing and target specific voices more than traditional hearing aids, a study from researchers at Columbia University in New York City suggests.
A hearing system that monitors brain waves could help people with hearing loss communicate in noisy environments.
Researchers demonstrate a real-time brain-controlled hearing device that selectively enhances voices based on a listener's ...
Scientists at Columbia University's Zuckerman Institute have the first direct evidence from human studies that ...
Researchers developed a real-time brain-controlled hearing system that uses neural signals to identify and amplify the ...
Kelly Anne is a deputy editor at Forbes Advisor overseeing the development of various initiatives, including newsletters, social media, and new content verticals. Previously, she worked as a senior ...
Bluetooth Auracast technology could be great for expanding access. But for now, hearing aids with telecoils are still ...
Gadget Review on MSNOpinion
Disabled by design: How app-dependent hearing aids fail the people who need them most
Hearing aids now depend on smartphone apps for basic functions, creating calibration loops where medical devices face ...
More than 50 million Americans experience some degree of hearing loss, yet adoption of hearing aids remains surprisingly low. Many people delay or avoid hearing support because traditional devices can ...
Broadcast Retirement Network's Jeffrey Snyder discusses the advances in technology to help individuals that are challenged by partial or full hearing loss with Towson University's Julie A. Norin, Au.D ...
Achin Bhowmik, Ph.D., Chief Technology Officer and Executive Vice President of Engineering at Starkey and adjunct professor at Stanford. Hearing loss is a public health crisis, with a staggering 1.5 ...
New technology is getting rave reviews at Appleton International Airport. In fact, Appleton’s airport is the first in the state to implement whats ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results