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by dlandis
4187 days ago
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Hmm, I'm not sure you understand it any better than I do. The article says: >Well, if you get hearing damage at a specific frequency, you’ll start to lose sensitivity to the quiet sounds at this frequency. However, your sensitivity to loud sounds remains the same. If their sensitivity to loud sounds remained the same on the one hand, why would they be unable to tolerate certain sounds on the other hand. Seems contradictory. |
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Hearing is complex: you have the cochlea acting as both sensor and first pass signal processing. There's a muscle that acts as a built-in gain control that can cut sounds by about 20dB, partly so your own voice doesn't deafen you.
Hearing damage isn't just loss of sensitivity—apparently it can alter the shape of cochlear filters' response too, changing the way masking works. And I'd imagine the brain tries to compensate as hearing loss progresses, which could have interesting effects.
More info:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auditory_masking http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acoustic_reflex
Edit: Less related, but a similar phenomenon that happens to me: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Misophonia. Hearing has odd failure modes.