Bionic Ears

Introduction into State-of-the-Art Hearing Aid Technology

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Video duration
01:02:13
Language
English
Abstract
In many social situations being hearing impaired is a serious handicap, not only for elderly people. Today's hearing aids are tiny computers that do a decent job in signal processing. During the last years, the progress in this technology was significant, amongst other things by switching from analog to digital devices. Since this field becomes more and more related to computer technology, there is even more improvement to be expected. In particular, it turns into a more and more interesting playground for hackers.

Unfortunately, we are still quite far away from what was promised as the future in that 70es TV series "The Bionic Woman" [1]. Starting with a brief introduction about audiology, I will present current technical solutions (and political non-solutions) for hearing aids. Besides the hearing aids themselves, there exist a couple of interesting peripheral solutions for specific situations such as using the phone, listening to concerts and talks, or just consuming music with an mp3 player. All these not only enhance the user's life, they also open the door for creative hacks. Although the hearing-aid hacking community is still rather small, I will present some current projects and ideas for future ones.

Infos about the talk including (sometime soon ;)) slides: http://www.hackandhear.com

[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Bionic_Woman

Talk ID
4669
Event:
28c3
Day
2
Room
Saal 2
Start
5:15 p.m.
Duration
01:00:00
Track
Hacking
Type of
lecture
Speaker
Helga Velroyen
Talk Slug & media link
28c3-4669-en-bionic_ears

Talk & Speaker speed statistics

Very rough underestimation:
146.0 wpm
798.1 spm
147.1 wpm
800.3 spm
100.0% Checking done100.0%
0.0% Syncing done0.0%
0.0% Transcribing done0.0%
0.0% Nothing done yet0.0%
  

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Talk & Speaker speed statistics with word clouds

Whole talk:
146.0 wpm
798.1 spm
Helga Velroyen:
147.1 wpm
800.3 spm