READ

Listen up: Hearing loss under 50

Our sight and hearing are critical for communicating. Glasses can help our eyes straight away, but what about hearing loss?
Kyle Brown
Kyle Brown
Digital Content Creator
Listen up: Hearing loss under 50

Imagine realising you’ve lost access to one of your senses.

How would this change the way you experience the world around you?

And, if you lose your hearing or sight, how does this change the way you communicate?

For many of us, we correct our eyesight over the course of our lives. Some wear glasses from a young age. Others might get surgery later in life for conditions like cataracts.

But when it comes to hearing loss, we tend to put up with it until it’s too late.

Hearing loss can cause physiological changes in the body, along with increasing the cost of healthcare in the long run. It has also been linked to changes in cognitive ability.

So how do you deal with early hearing loss, especially when it’s not bad enough to need an expensive hearing aid?

Perth’s Nuheara is trying to solve that problem.

View Larger

Justin Miller believes your hearing is as unique as you

Justin Miller believes your hearing is as unique as you

Hearing lost and found

Nuheara is a company specialising in earbuds which also assist hearing.

Before founding Nuheara, CEO and co-founder Justin Miller worked with Sensear—a company building smart headsets for communicating in noisy environments.

While Justin was demonstrating this technology, he discovered a common factor in many of the people testing it—hearing loss.

“A lot of people asked me could I get something like this to use in a restaurant?” he says. “It made me realise this type of hardware could be used in other areas.”

View Larger

Nuheara’s sound lab lets the company test and refine its hardware for a variety of environments

Nuheara’s sound lab lets the company test and refine its hardware for a variety of environments

Occupational hazards

Occupational noise-induced hearing loss is one of the most common causes of hearing loss in under 50s.

A 2010 government Hearing Health report showed 28% to 32% of Australians work in environments where they are exposed to potentially deafening levels of noise.

And often they don’t realise their hearing has been damaged until it’s too late.

According to Justin, 75% of the hearing market isn’t being serviced, especially those suffering from low to medium-level hearing loss.

Justin is in that group himself, having partial hearing loss in one ear.

“People start losing their hearing from around the age of 35,” he says. “Most people usually don’t do anything about it until it’s gone too far and they need an expensive hearing aid.”

Born global

In 2014, Justin and founded Nuheara with David Cannington.

With a strong connection to the international hearing community, they launched Nuheara globally from day one.

The aim was to create a device to improve people’s hearing while also making the device usable for other tasks, such as listening to music.

This lead to Nuheara’s IQbuds—a pair of wireless earbuds you can customise to your own preferences.

“Wearing things in our ears has become normal, especially since Apple’s wireless AirPods have come around,” Justin says.

“HEARING AID COMPANIES HAVE SPENT YEARS TRYING TO HIDE THEIR DEVICES, BUT WE’RE SEEING PEOPLE ARE COMFORTABLE WEARING DEVICES PUBLICLY.”
View Larger

Nuheara’s Ear ID lets you tests your hearing and tailor your IQbuds to suit your hearing

Image credit: Nuheara
Nuheara’s Ear ID lets you tests your hearing and tailor your IQbuds to suit your hearing

Hearing smarter not harder

At this point, you might be wondering ‘do they work?’ and ‘are they comfortable?’

The earbuds themselves are quite light and comfortable to wear. They come with a range of ear tip sizes and don’t feel much different from standard in-ear headphones.

Straight out of the box, you’ll notice you can hear yourself and those around you in clear stereo. It’s not like hearing a recording of yourself – It’s how your voice normally sounds and there’s no delay.

The touch sensors on both earpieces let you control their settings and, once paired to a phone, you can customise these functions. You can also adjust individual settings for each preset environment—home, office, driving and so on.

View Larger

IQbuds Boost come with a charging case and different ear tip options

IQbuds Boost come with a charging case and different ear tip options

On the Boost model, the app runs you through a hearing test to generate an “Ear ID”. This “clinical grade hearing assessment” calibrates the earbuds to your hearing levels.

The difference is a little surreal at first, but in an area with background noise, the change is immediate. Conversations are easier to hear while background noise is reduced—a definite improvement for those who struggle to hear in loud environments.

Changing more than hearing

Nuheara also has a secondary use for their technology called Project Life Change.

The project focuses on people who suffer from a range of concentration and auditory disorders. As the technology helps to reduce distractions and other noises that might derail the thought process, it can be used to help the user stay focused.

It’s a project which has helped adults and children alike, and it’s only one step the team are taking to help get their product to those who need it most.

While IQbuds are sold online and in stores, the focus is to promote them to a more direct market—audiologists.

“We’re looking at ways to better promote our devices to those who need it, with around 100 million people estimated to be in that low to medium hearing loss range,” Justin says. “We have a trial ongoing in clinics in Ireland to see if there’s a way to work with hearing aid groups to help provide our products.”

Justin’s hope is one day, you’ll be able to walk into a store, get your ears tested, and walk out with a solution—just like buying a pair of glasses.

Kyle Brown
About the author
Kyle Brown
Kyle wanted to be an astronaut ever since he watched Red Dwarf and Star Trek as a kid. He forced his family to go to Kennedy Space Center when on a trip to Disney World and wanted a Space Shuttle kit for his 10th birthday (to his disappointment, he got a bike). Somehow he ended up working as a Journalist for the ABC, BBC and SBS before starting a degree in Physics. He's obsessed with new technology and wants to add Astrophysics to his utility belt.
View articles
Kyle wanted to be an astronaut ever since he watched Red Dwarf and Star Trek as a kid. He forced his family to go to Kennedy Space Center when on a trip to Disney World and wanted a Space Shuttle kit for his 10th birthday (to his disappointment, he got a bike). Somehow he ended up working as a Journalist for the ABC, BBC and SBS before starting a degree in Physics. He's obsessed with new technology and wants to add Astrophysics to his utility belt.
View articles

NEXT ARTICLE

We've got chemistry, let's take it to the next level!

Get the latest WA science news delivered to your inbox, every fortnight.

Republish

Creative Commons Logo

Republishing our content

We want our stories to be shared and seen by as many people as possible.

Therefore, unless it says otherwise, copyright on the stories on Particle belongs to Scitech and they are published under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

This allows you to republish our articles online or in print for free. You just need to credit us and link to us, and you can’t edit our material or sell it separately.

Using the ‘republish’ button on our website is the easiest way to meet our guidelines.

Guidelines

You cannot edit the article.

When republishing, you have to credit our authors, ideally in the byline. You have to credit Particle with a link back to the original publication on Particle.

If you’re republishing online, you must use our pageview counter, link to us and include links from our story. Our page view counter is a small pixel-ping (invisible to the eye) that allows us to know when our content is republished. It’s a condition of our guidelines that you include our counter. If you use the ‘republish’ then you’ll capture our page counter.

If you’re republishing in print, please email us to let us so we know about it (we get very proud to see our work republished) and you must include the Particle logo next to the credits. Download logo here.

If you wish to republish all our stories, please contact us directly to discuss this opportunity.

Images

Most of the images used on Particle are copyright of the photographer who made them.

It is your responsibility to confirm that you’re licensed to republish images in our articles.

Video

All Particle videos can be accessed through YouTube under the Standard YouTube Licence.

The Standard YouTube licence

  1. This licence is ‘All Rights Reserved’, granting provisions for YouTube to display the content, and YouTube’s visitors to stream the content. This means that the content may be streamed from YouTube but specifically forbids downloading, adaptation, and redistribution, except where otherwise licensed. When uploading your content to YouTube it will automatically use the Standard YouTube licence. You can check this by clicking on Advanced Settings and looking at the dropdown box ‘License and rights ownership’.
  2. When a user is uploading a video he has license options that he can choose from. The first option is “standard YouTube License” which means that you grant the broadcasting rights to YouTube. This essentially means that your video can only be accessed from YouTube for watching purpose and cannot be reproduced or distributed in any other form without your consent.

Contact

For more information about using our content, email us: particle@scitech.org.au

Copy this HTML into your CMS
Press Ctrl+C to copy