Not taking risks of audio noise exposure seriously. Hearing loss is gradual, and tinnitus often starts as a temporary thing, so it’s very easy to accumulate major damage before you realize it’s a problem.
I strongly recommend Etymotic earplugs. (I have this variety, I think.) While wearing them, basically the only effect is that you feel louder, and I always have them in my pocket, so anytime something gets louder than I’m comfortable with, I just pop them in, and I can still hear fine.
I’m probably risking this. Do you know how I can test for hearing loss, or how I can avoid tinnitus? I should do my own research, but I figured I’d check if you have tips.
Any good set of headphones can reproduce the whole 20Hz to 20kHz human frequency range, and any audio editor software can generate tone sweeps. The frequency response won’t be perfectly flat but it will give a rough idea without paying for properly calibrated testing. Each ear can be checked separately.
As for tinnitus, I don’t know what influences permanence, so the safest assumption would be to avoid any sound exposure that causes it.
Not taking risks of audio noise exposure seriously. Hearing loss is gradual, and tinnitus often starts as a temporary thing, so it’s very easy to accumulate major damage before you realize it’s a problem.
I carry around earplugs everywhere I go. It looks a bit weird, but I’m very glad for it.
I strongly recommend Etymotic earplugs. (I have this variety, I think.) While wearing them, basically the only effect is that you feel louder, and I always have them in my pocket, so anytime something gets louder than I’m comfortable with, I just pop them in, and I can still hear fine.
Me too, although they’re for misophonia...
I’m probably risking this. Do you know how I can test for hearing loss, or how I can avoid tinnitus? I should do my own research, but I figured I’d check if you have tips.
Any good set of headphones can reproduce the whole 20Hz to 20kHz human frequency range, and any audio editor software can generate tone sweeps. The frequency response won’t be perfectly flat but it will give a rough idea without paying for properly calibrated testing. Each ear can be checked separately.
As for tinnitus, I don’t know what influences permanence, so the safest assumption would be to avoid any sound exposure that causes it.