Hi @ErikaS I've applied the Low Pass (frequency tone/1.41)/High Pass (LPx2) rule for two of my tones (a 80 Hz tone and a 13.000 Hz tone). It's based on the Okamoto study and you can use Adobe Audition to apply this particular rule.
@Christiaan thank you for sharing. I too have a high tone/hiss around 12.5k hz which is where my hearing is affected in R ear from ear infection, so that’s from loss, but then other tones (one around 1200hz) that are not in a loss range at all. So can it still work on those tones even though hearing loss isn’t present at those frequencies?
Hi @ErikaS , sorry for not responding on time. I had a lot of work and some personal stuff going on.
It should not be a problem. At least, that's my experience (mild hearing loss). In theory, Notched Sound Therapy should work for people who have good hearing, so you could give it a try.
I have to add that people can still have dips at frequencies that are not specifically tested by audiologists/ENTs. They only test between 125-1500-7000-12.000 Hz., etc. They don't check between those specific frequencies (e.g. 375 or 6850 Hz.). This is called hidden hearing loss: https://www.healthyhearing.com/report/53066-Hidden-hearing-loss
@Christiaan thank you for the input! Unfortunately, my only consistent tone on frequency is my high electric hiss/whine tone. All the others jump around, there’s a definite pattern to the frequencies they jump to, like one pure tone in my L ear goes from 2200 to 2100 then 2700. So can’t really do this with that nonsense :(
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