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4 posts tagged with "tympan"

Tympan

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Tympan with an HDA 200 Headset

· One min read
Chip Audette
Developer

When using a device like the Tympan for hearing science, it is important to know the maximum loudness that can be produced by your system. If you cannot get loud enough, it can limit the range of hearing loss that you can work with. It is important to know how loud you can get. So, we measured the maximum sound pressure level that can be produced by the Tympan when used with a standard HDA 200 headset from Sennheiser. Go to openaudio.blogspot.com to see what it can do!

Our Mission

· One min read
Odile Clavier
Research Engineer

Open Hearing is a website dedicated to supporting the development of an open-source platform for hearing research. We are committed to open source and believe that in doing so we can accelerate research studies and facilitate translation of novel algorithms into widespread use. Our goal is to lower barriers for hardware and software refinement and facilitate translation of these advances into patient care.  

Our core group of developers is comprised of peers at Creare and researchers at Purdue University and at the University of Pittsburg. The development of this platform is supported by a grant from the National Institute of Health in partnership with the National Institute on Deafness and other Communication Disorders (R44DC021123). Tympan has been in development since 2016, TabSINT since 2014. The Auren is the newest addition to this suite of open-source tools we are now bringing together to expand the reach and user base, so we can build a community of researchers able to collaborate freely using low-cost, high-performance hardware and software.

The Tympan

· One min read
Chip Audette
Developer

The possibilities are endless! Tympan offers powerful audio hardware that can acquire and process audio in real-time within the user-friendly, Arduino programming environment. You can also control the Tympan over Bluetooth using our mobile app, which can be configured to your custom application with only a few lines of Arduino code.

See tympan.org for more details on the Tympan.