OK, so... I just stumbled onto this thread. I've been using the Neosensory Buzz for 4 weeks now. Aggressively. 30 minutes to an hour a day. I also wore it while playing Art of Zen clips for 6 hours straight. I had a bad spike later that night.
My impression so far is that it has softened my noise to a frying hiss. And perhaps a 10% volume reduction. Hard to say for sure. My tinnitus varies all day and night, but for the most part, it seems a little lower overall. I was hoping for more, but I'm going to keep going the full two months.
So... Why? Because unlike the naysayers on here, I actually watched David Eagleman's TED Talk. All the way through. Prior to the Buzz for deaf people, they created a vest with the same buzzing motors on it, only a lot of them. They are helping create a "new sense" by associating vibrations with sounds. Creating a new neural pathway. There is NO REASON not to believe this can do the same thing for tinnitus, when you factor in the Lenire and Notch Therapy. Major hearing aid companies like Signia include Notch Therapy in their hearing aids now. I've read the papers from their scientists on this.
This shit WORKS. The only question is if the stimulation has to be through the tongue or can it be thru the skin. David Eagleman believes the skin is just as effective, and it's not a big leap to believe that, given the proven success of the Buzz for deaf people.
You can say "placebo" all you want. But you can't placebo your way out of severe tinnitus down 50% in 8 weeks, like David Eagleman personally told me a few weeks ago that one of their users reported. I've talked to him personally, by Zoom. The company is the real deal. They're not the typical money grubbing scammers, like that scumbag Liam Boehm, who may have good ideas that work, but is trying to rob people of $400 to give that help to them.