- Apr 18, 2013
- 1,633
- Tinnitus Since
- 2003
- Cause of Tinnitus
- Flu, Noise-induced, Jaw trauma
I have some questions too,
What you have here is a theory, correct? You have not tested it at all?
You are funding to conduct the very first trial without any data to confirm if it will work or not?
I appreciate that you have developed and are marketing as a medical device, but you can still test the principles behind the device to see if it indeed has a permanent effect on tinnitus, to me this would be a pre-requisite to funding. I don't understand how you are aiming to get crowd funding for an idea that may not work? This sounds more to me like a candidate for the funding streams available for proof of concept / proof of model / taking a concept to market - at your stage of development, if I could prove my concept, I would qualify for funding from a variety of sources with the product.
I cannot see anything that differentiates this from Residual Inhibition, you seem to be instead varying the sound delivered to confuse the brain, not let it get used to a sound. Explain to me please if I am wrong, and don't worry about getting too technical if needed.
As it is a sound therapy, delivered by a fairly simple method (iDevice), I see no barrier to conduct a trial with volunteers at all (and as I'm typing ATEOS has already summed that above.).
What you have here is a theory, correct? You have not tested it at all?
You are funding to conduct the very first trial without any data to confirm if it will work or not?
I appreciate that you have developed and are marketing as a medical device, but you can still test the principles behind the device to see if it indeed has a permanent effect on tinnitus, to me this would be a pre-requisite to funding. I don't understand how you are aiming to get crowd funding for an idea that may not work? This sounds more to me like a candidate for the funding streams available for proof of concept / proof of model / taking a concept to market - at your stage of development, if I could prove my concept, I would qualify for funding from a variety of sources with the product.
I cannot see anything that differentiates this from Residual Inhibition, you seem to be instead varying the sound delivered to confuse the brain, not let it get used to a sound. Explain to me please if I am wrong, and don't worry about getting too technical if needed.
As it is a sound therapy, delivered by a fairly simple method (iDevice), I see no barrier to conduct a trial with volunteers at all (and as I'm typing ATEOS has already summed that above.).