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Vigor 402 Programmable Hearing Amplifiers For Profound Sensorineural Hearing Loss
5 advantages of digital hearing aids
1. Selectively amplifies sounds
Although it’s not too challenging to make a hearing aid that works
well when listening to a single voice in a quiet room, the presence
of background noise changes things considerably. Background noises
can create a huge distraction and make it difficult or impossible
to accurately distinguish the voice you want to listen to from
those other noises. Amplifying all sounds equally doesn’t solve
this problem.
Digital hearing aids are able to selectively amplify sounds, so they can filter out the background noise and amplify the sounds that you actually want to hear. This can make a huge difference in the wearer’s quality of life; for example, it allows them to participate in conversations at parties and in restaurants.
2. Reduces feedback
Feedback is the high-pitched whining sound that can sometimes be
emitted by hearing aids. This occurs when the hearing aid picks up
its own output and amplifies that, resulting in an increasingly
loud sound that drowns out other sounds. The presence of feedback
is one of the most bothersome problems that traditional hearing
aids have had.
Digital hearing aids are able to eliminate the problem of feedback. When the hearing aid detects its own output, it selectively filters that out and doesn’t amplify it. This prevents that awful high-pitched sound from developing.
3. Automatically adjusts the volume to environment
The overall level of volume in the environment can change
dramatically throughout the day. For example, a person may leave a
quiet home or car and go out onto a busy street. The volume level
of the hearing aids needs to adjust with this changing soundscape.
With older generations of hearing aids, this had to be done
manually.
Digital hearing aids can detect the overall level of noise and automatically adjust, so that the wearer doesn’t need to fiddle with any volume dials as they move from one environment to another.
4. Directional microphones
Many digital hearing aids employ directional microphones. These aim
to preferentially pick up sound coming from a specific direction
(in front of the wearer), rather than picking up sound coming from
all around equally. This aids in listening to one sound that you
want to hear amidst a sea of noise that you need to tune out. The
digital processing of the sound adds to the effectiveness of this
feature, making digital hearing aids excellent at helping people to
distinguish a voice they’re listening to above background noise.
5. Improved sound quality
Any of you who remember listening to music on vinyl records or
cassettes will recognize that the sound quality on these analog
modalities is different from that of a CD (which is a digital
format). Digital produces much crisper and clearer sound. In much
the same way, the sound produced by a digital hearing aid is
generally more crisp and clear than the sound produced by an older
analog hearing aid.