New Hearing Aid Uses Your Tooth To Transmit Sound
kkleiner writes to share a new device from Sonitus Medical that transmits sound to the inner ear via the teeth and jawbone. Dubbed "SoundBite," the device captures sound using a microphone in the ear and transmits to an in-the-mouth device that in turn sends the sounds through the jaw. "There are other hearing aid devices that utilize bone conduction. Most, however, use a titanium pin drilled into the jaw bone (or skull) to transmit sound to the cochlea. SoundBite seems to be the first non-surgical, non-invasive, easily removable device. While they are likely years from retail production, Sonitus Medical plans on having SoundBite ITMs fitted to each individual's upper back teeth and fabricated fairly quickly (1 to 2 weeks). A complete system is planned to include two ITMs, 1 BTE, and a charger. In the wider world of cochlear implants, SoundBite may only be fit for relatively specialized use. Still, the ability to easily upgrade or replace individual components makes the device competitive. A similar device could be adapted to provide audio for a personalized augmented reality system. Perhaps the Bluetooth headset of the future will involve actual teeth."
Don't mind me, I only look crazy; I pulled my cochlear implant teeth out so they couldn't send me back to the apocalyptic future!
"Be prepared, son. That's my motto. Be prepared." --Joe Hallenbeck
This will only make hearing the occasional biting criticism of one's peers harder for them.
Ezekiel 23:20
The government has had this technology for years. They use these dental implants to send auditory signals to the populace while people are asleep. It's all part of the one-world government conspiracy. Many of the so-called paranoid schizophrenics are really just people who don't tolerate the subconscious aural programming very well. Take a look outside your window for the black helicopter before you mod me down. I'm the guy leaning out the back with the parabolic microphone, waving at you.
Quite a lot of boomers who were way too close to the stacks at concerts may be happy about this in a few years, but here's hoping that it doesn't require real teeth since dentures may be a big part of the demographic.
Kent! This is God!
As a deaf person, I can tell you that the sound of a drill in my tooth is one of the few sounds I can hear exactly as well as you can, so this is probably a pretty decent idea.
Didn't Beethoven hook a wire between his teeth and clavichord (small piano-like instrument) to aid in composing his music when is ears were failing?
Table-ized A.I.
I remember buying a fifty cent lollipop that was made in Mexico that had a metal stick in the middle that let you hear music when you bit it. This happened about a month or so after first reading about this technology in a magazine I had ten years ago. Why are they just now coming to market with this for serious applications?
I saw/heard an external bone conduction device with no spill over into the air, at the Lake County, Indiana fair around 1962 give or take a couple years. It was shaped like a small, rectangular pencil sharpener cut in half so that a half-cone was cut out of one side. That hollow was placed on the bridge of the nose. The fidelity was superb for the time. The drawback was, no stereo, hence no or very poor localization. I've watched for the commercial version ever since, but have never seen one.
"I may be synthetic, but I'm not stupid." -- Bishop 341-B
Assuming it could attach well enough that swallowing/choking wouldn't be a concern, this would be very nice to use an alarm clock that wouldn't wake up other people in the same bed / dorm room / apartment.
As a deaf person, I can tell you that the sound of a drill in my tooth is one of the few sounds I can hear exactly as well as you can, so this is probably a pretty decent idea.
No doubt you experience or otherwise sense something that's noticeable to you, but I doubt it's the same. Once upon a time I spent a period of about 2 years getting dental work done. Everything from ordinary fillings and cleanings, to root canals and surgery. Sounds like a bad horror movie? Not at all. My dentist ran a small office in Beverly Hills and offered, provided, or otherwise insisted on the following:
1. As soon as you sit down, you're asked to pick your favourite music (if you haven't brought any with you), and you get handed a full-sized set of head phones.
2. A few minutes later (during which you hope the attractive assistant accidentally rubs herself against your arm more than once), a small rubber attachment is placed on your nose, and the gas is turned on, and left on.
3. Later still (if you're there for anything but a simple cleaning), you get a topical application of novocaine. You don't care, and barely notice when a few minutes pass and a few injections directly to your gums are made.
Now you've been sitting in that chair about 20 minutes. You sensory inputs have been muted one by one and you're enjoying a high. At this point, there's no way anyone in that chair will notice, sense, or care about anything but the groove of the music coming out of the head phones. Am I exaggerating? Let's put it this way -- by the end of the 3rd or 4th appointment, I was looking forward to my visits, and hoped each one would last a long time.
If you hear, smell, see, or otherwise feel anything, I'd suggest a different dentist.