Like an estimated eight million people in the UK, Matt has tinnitus. But he also suffers from another related, though rarer, ...
There’s a good chance that you haven’t heard about a rare condition called chromhidrosis. In a nutshell, the person afflicted with the disease produces colored sweat, from yellow to green, even red ...
There are things we cannot fully comprehend unless we’ve been there, firsthand. It’s why many of us develop misconceptions ...
Ogre spiders do not have ears. However, they are capable of hearing their prey and potential predators from at least six feet ...
Nothing nails the basics for its latest Ear 3 ANC wireless earbuds, but its hyped-up Super Mic feature sounds soupy at best.
RIT audio engineering professor awarded NIH funding to improve auditory decoding technologies and how the brain helps censor ...
Does walking influence how people process sensory information, like sounds, from the environment? In a new JNeurosci paper, ...
A breakthrough in pediatric medicine: a local kindergartener experiences the joy of sound for the first time after undergoing ...
The new AirPods can translate languages in your ears. The tech is a strong examples of how AI can be used in a seamless, ...
The path people take while walking can influence how the brain responds to sounds.
A doctor explains the common (and not so common) reasons that you might hear a pulse in your ear, also known as pulsatile tinnitus. Plus, when to see a doctor.
New research challenges the assumption that difficulty hearing in noisy places is always linked to hearing loss.