Assistive Technology for Hearing Impairments
- Modern hearing aids make use of two technologies. Analog aids have more control over sound amplification than the traditional hearing aid but they amplify speech and background noise equally. Programmable analog aids store programs for different settings: quiet, noisy or very loud. Digital aids can be programmed more exactly to the user's needs and provide better feedback and noise reduction.
- The speaker wears a microphone and the user has a receiver. This is useful in many situations: meetings and conferences, classroom lectures, restaurants and in large areas such as theatres and museums.
- This too is a personal listening device where the sound is transmitted using infrared waves.
- Telephone amplifiers have long been available. There is also a small portable amplifier, which the user carries with her. It attaches to the handset of most phones. Special phones come equipped with a small screen to display real time text. In the latest advance, the user does not have to go through a relay system to get the captions but can dial the number directly.
- Visual devices, such as flashing or strobe lights, link to fire alarms, doorbells and baby monitors. They provide visual signals to the user. Alarm clocks and pagers with a vibrating function also help.
- Closed captions and open captions are examples of speech-to-text. Movies and TV shows are incorporating closed captions in ever-increasing numbers.
Hearing Aids
Personal FM (Frequency Modulation) System
Infrared Systems
Telephone Amplification and Captioning
Visual Alerting Devices
Speech-to-Text
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