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Let say if you are around 85 decibel for about two hours according to the guide you dont need to use earplugs because it is still less than 8...
I know that , I am not trying to see how long I can listen to these loud sounds. I am trying to use it as a precaution as when to use earplugs if...
Can someone show me how to use or read the noise chart of 85 db 8 hours http://www.noisehelp.com/noise... Read detail for question? For example...
http://www.gcaudio.com/resources/howtos/loudness.html Correct me if I'm wrong but is this guide saying you can be exposed to 90 dB for 8 hours a...
Oh no I'm just asking if this was what the guide is saying
I wanna ask what do you do to preserve your high frequency 8khz-20khz? and how old are you? Like do you wear earplugs in everyday environment...
Hi how long can we walk in your average street 75-80ish db? and be safe?
Do you need to wear earplugs walking on the street, eating in a noisy restaurant 75-80 db, driving, doing grocery shopping, basically daily...
bump
Do you have a hearing loss in which frequency is it?
Do you have a hearing loss if yes, mild, moderate or severe or perhaps the gradual sloping audiogram due to aging?
is it because you are borned with 20000 hair cells, and with hearing loss you just lose a number of hair cells, but the remaining hair cell are...
in cases with hearing loss like these. do you guys still use the same hearing loss guideline by ohsa saying the damage takes 85 db around 8 hours?...
For example it takes a normal hearing person 85 db for 8 hours as a guideline for hearing damage. When you have a hearing loss ( mild, moderate,...
I read studies that shows nac + alcar combined has a better protection, http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15966690 So I see there is a huge...
Here are the links : http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10491957 http://www.thegoodear.com/docs/restoration_of_hearing_loss_.pdf also there are...
Right, i know its not cure as in restore his hearing 100% but did they successfully grow some hair cell back for "some" increase in hearing?
WAIT so there is finally success at curing some hearing losss on human?!!! OMFG did I just read what I think I just read? please confirm me!
There seem to be 2 hearing loss types we need to prevent! the first is the 4khz noise notch, usually due to the anatomy of the cochlea, if you...
Actually i also saw one post on here by xanaxvictim who posted her audiogram and she can hear up to 20khz at 10 db! Let me message her and see if...
Guys also take a look at this http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2868117/ This goes to further kinda support telis, asian, and bwspot's...
Just curious if we start to lose our really high frequency 8khz-20khz with age? So we can't hear 15khz by the time we are in our 50s? Then by the...
https://books.google.com/books?id=pT7NKZz_DF8C&pg=PA17&lpg=PA17&dq=hair+cell+resistance+to+nihl&source=bl&ots=TmWGSzaC5d&sig=s4WTwHLFaQRXzkAg9-Xn8D...
"For me the domino effect is: 15 kHz can only go after 16kHz has gone. 16 can only go if 17 kHz is gone" yeah i think this is the case too.
I have a question though, which is traditionally thought of as age-related loss or presbycusis, can we preseerve 8-20khz by having low noise...
that is the domino effect! exactly! because the sound waves hit them first, so there are the first to bend,; and follow by the next lower frequency
yes, this is what my point is about
basically in this thread, i would like to understand whether there is a relationship- that if you have normal hearing 0-8khz, does that imply...
Ah, I was unsure of what you were saying, but you are saying that how do we not that 8-20khz didn't just appear in the year 1900 instead of 1000...
NO , I never said it is there for human speech , they are for localization of speech and spatial perception on a 3d dimensional plane, in other...
You guys better believe it, but a lot of people and including stupid audiologists tend to think that you don't need 8-20khz. But if you think...
oh so what you're saying is noise doesn't really cause damage in the 8-20khz , you lose them from 20khz and downward gradually by age or ototoxic...
Is it by noise or purely by aging? I know the medical literature says that noise-induced hearing loss is usually a big dip at 4khz, but can dip...
if the environment has intermittent noise of 85 decibel, and the exposure chart say we can be exposed to it for 8 hours straight, does this mean...
When people say their hearing has remain the same for a couple years, are they talking about 0-8khz only? What about 8-20khz? can we protect that...
I just wanted see how long has people audiogram stayed the same.