Saturday, July 21, 2012
The Hearing Video
Hearing loss demonstration
If you are a regular visitor of this blog, odds are you're a hearing loss sufferer. You can use this demonstration to make others understand what could happen to them if they don't protect their ears, this demonstration might help. Or if you are simply curious about what is it like to lose your hearing, this demonstration can help you too.
http://www.hse.gov.uk/noise/demonstration.htm
or you can directly try it here :
Noise Induced hearing loss demonstration
http://www.hse.gov.uk/noise/demonstration.htm
or you can directly try it here :
Noise Induced hearing loss demonstration
Tool to estimate the performance of hearing protection
The United Kingdom's Occupational Safety and Health Administration has a noise exposure tool to help you work out your daily noise exposure, weekly noise exposures, and estimate the performance of hearing protection.
http://www.hse.gov.uk/noise/calculator.htm
Interactive tool to virtually visit places and determine noise levels
A sound tour of the city with the New York Times
Great interactive tool to get an idea of average noise levels in different locations and the potential danger to one's ears.
Just in case you were curious about how the journalists obtained their noise measurements:
how-the-noise-was-measured
U.S. Noise Standards below those of other industrialized nations
By CARA BUCKLEY NYTimes
Noise levels recorded at nearly a dozen restaurants, gyms and bars in New York City reached heights that, if sustained over as little as two hours, would violate standards set by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration to protect workers’ hearing. But even if the regulations were heeded, many audiologists say, they would not protect hearing enough: federal noise protection standards lag behind much of the industrialized world’s.
Go to article >>
Noise levels recorded at nearly a dozen restaurants, gyms and bars in New York City reached heights that, if sustained over as little as two hours, would violate standards set by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration to protect workers’ hearing. But even if the regulations were heeded, many audiologists say, they would not protect hearing enough: federal noise protection standards lag behind much of the industrialized world’s.
Go to article >>
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