Thanks for offering! Maybe the best place to start is: what are your skills and areas of interest?
Let's have the FAA fast track it.I just came inside after playing with this friggen stupid quad copter and it seems like my high pitch tinnitus is lower. I also took a 5 hour energy.
5 hour energy + quadcopter = cure?
Good question. I received extensive training in logic in my community's schooling system, but I have not attended college (yet) so I can't claim any "official" skills.
I think I could be good at researching and critiquing evidence for treatments, as well as general editing of any essays etc. for spelling, grammar and logical flow. I'm very interested in philosophy and epistemology and I have personal (not professional) experience in these areas.
Does five hour energy have taurine in it?I just came inside after playing with this friggen stupid quad copter and it seems like my high pitch tinnitus is lower. I also took a 5 hour energy.
5 hour energy + quadcopter = cure?
The major ingredients in 5-Hour Energy are: B Vitamins 6, 12, Niacin, and Folic Acid and an "Energy Blend" that includes Taurine, Glucuronolactone, Malic Acid, Tyrosine, Phenylalanine, Caffeine, and Citicoline (as of October 2007).Oct 23, 2008Does five hour energy have taurine in it?
no wonder he was hooked on oxycontin.On Fοχ network (USΛ) Sεαn Hαnnιty is interviewing Rυsh Lιmbαugh right now.
Rυsh said he is totally deaf in both ears, all "35,000 hair cells completely wiped out", and "totally dependent on eight electrodes" replacing these hair cells (I think this is one implant in right ear only).
Hαnnιty mentioned the headsets and ear pieces they wear in radio can cause hearing damage from the volume of noise piped in over years of broadcasting.
Further reading:
https://www.rushlimbaugh.com/daily/...chlear_implant_activation_magic_happened/amp/
6 months from the end of the trial is how they made it sound. So like 9 months.
too slow.6 months from the end of the trial is how they made it sound. So like 9 months.
Why do you write the names with quirky accented letters?On Fοχ network (USΛ) Sεαn Hαnnιty is interviewing Rυsh Lιmbαugh right now.
Rυsh said he is totally deaf in both ears, all "35,000 hair cells completely wiped out", and "totally dependent on eight electrodes" replacing these hair cells (I think this is one implant in right ear only).
Hαnnιty mentioned the headsets and ear pieces they wear in radio can cause hearing damage from the volume of noise piped in over years of broadcasting.
Further reading:
https://www.rushlimbaugh.com/daily/...chlear_implant_activation_magic_happened/amp/
LA Beast should try tinnitus. He has nothing on us.
ask ATA and BTA to mention regenerative medicine. besides all tinnitus is only 20dB anyway and our emotions can make it go away remember.Ask this guy to do a tinnitus awareness vid?
THAT DOCTOR SHOULD BE HANGED BY HIS BALLS.ask ATA and BTA to mention regenerative medicine. besides all tinnitus is only 20dB anyway and our emotions can make it go away remember.
THAT DOCTOR SHOULD BE HANGED BY HIS BALLS.
What did he think saying that!
no wonder he was hooked on oxycontin.
besides all tinnitus is only 20dB anyway and our emotions can make it go away remember.
20 db tinnitus caused by cochlear synapse damage/muffled hearing + 20 db of regular soft noise hearing loss would give off the perception of 40db tinnitus.
Thoughts on this hypothesis?
it's still 40db perception.
I have made some great suggestions here that I have used for non tinnitus fund funding and awareness before I developed severe tinnitus and physical conditions.At the peril of it seeming like we're ganging up on you (sorry!), I do want to respond once more. Your initiative is truly admirable, and as I and @Markku have said before, we will support your project in any way we can. But we're also asking you to learn from our experience.
@Markku has been running this site for 7 years, and @Ed209 has been around for 3 years or so and is the only member I can think of (outside of core TT staff) who has successfully carried out big projects. What they're trying to tell you is that it's not the structure of the forum that is the obstacle here, but getting people to dedicate themselves to projects for the long haul. Even in the six months that I've been volunteering, I have seen many members come up with great project ideas and none of them follow through.
I will be the first to acknowledge that we need to do a better job of communicating the various volunteering options! But I also know from experience that making people aware of project ideas and how they can contribute is not the hard part (we have Awareness & Fundraising, the Advocates section, the newsletter, special alerts, etc.). It's when push comes to shove and people realise how much work is actually involved that they back out. Every time, predictable like clock work. If I sound cynical, it's probably because I am a bit, LOL.
Would it theoretically be possible to find a way to measure tinnitus loudness accurately and objectively?There's no way of accurately measuring a perception using the A weighted or C weighted decibel scale. One of the problems is our fluid adaption to sound interpretation. For example, when tired, or in a state of stress, environmental sounds can alter in our perception quite dramatically. After all, sound is merely a conversion of sound waves into chemical and electrical signals; how the brain presents this to our higher processing centres entirely depends on the context of the noise.
The most common method is what I mentioned above, and that is to measure (as best as we can) the sensation level of a sound at a fixed frequency. Imagine there's a guy called John and he wants to know how loud his tinnitus is. John would go to the audiologist and they would tone match his tinnitus (if it is tonal), and let's say his tinnitus closely matches 6khz. Now, the audiologist would turn up the volume until John thinks both his tinnitus and the external noise are roughly the same. Let's say this turns out to be 40dB. To find out John's sensation level we would now need to find out what level of hearing loss John has at 6khz, so let's say this turns out to be 30db. That would mean John has a tinnitus sensation level of 10dB SL.
This isn't an exact science, but it's possibly the best method we have to measure tinnitus volume. Let me just state that we haven't really got a way of measuring a perception. If I measured mine against external noises I could claim it to be anywhere from 40dBa to 90dBa. I can hear mine next to a loud motorway, so does this mean I have 90dBa tinnitus? Of course it doesn't, because that would make no scientific sense at all.
Would it theoretically be possible to find a way to measure tinnitus loudness accurately and objectively?