Announcement Tinnitus Neuromodulator Sound Generator — myNoise.net Collaboration

One question though, should I listen to it using headphones, or external speakers should work?
With most audio - unless it's a precise therapy - I always say to go with what your ears prefer. If you like the sound on speakers then use those, likewise if you prefer headphones then thats best for you.

As always don't listen too loud :)
 
As always don't listen too loud :)
Yeah, that's my main concern with headphones, I never know when it's loud, all volumes seems to be loud since it's so close to your ears. haha

For now I'm sticking with my macbook speakers, it's not that effective, but when I want to enjoy some "silence" I turn it on on low volume and it kinda masks my T. Very effective I must say, you and Dr. Ir. Stéphane did a great job!
 
Hi @Steve,
How did you go on with the headset that goes in front of your ears ?...lots of love glynis
 
Is there anywhere to set to your tinnitus frequency though?
Hi! :)

What would you want to achieve by that?

Notched music therapy principle?

But to answer your question: not as far as I know (there being a feature to set your tinnitus frequency).

Markku
 
I love the rain. Sound fantastic through sennheiser OPEN head phones.

I went to the download page and am a little bit confused. There are about 30 sounds to download at a cost of $.99 ea. If I buy the All You Can Hear fo $9.99 I get all those ~30 sounds?

Again, love the rain. I hope to figure out how to work this app to the fullest. I will send to Dr Jastreboff. He will like it for sure.
 
This and the whole my noise site are the best thing i have ever found , my fav on line my noise sets are singing bells and sleeping dragon , the tinnitus one Steve and Stephane put together is nothing short of God sent
 
Listening to it now.
Very pleasing.
Reminds me of a futuristic scene out of "Logan's Run" or "Blade Runner".
The default settings work good for me.
The constant variations in the menagerie of tones disallow me from focusing on anything in particular and I can feel myself drifting.
I can see how this might discourage recruitment of auditory neurons, by allowing the full spectrum of frequencies to exercise the auditory cortex in a non-threatening way.
 
Listening to it now.
Very pleasing.
Reminds me of a futuristic scene out of "Logan's Run" or "Blade Runner".
The default settings work good for me.
The constant variations in the menagerie of tones disallow me from focusing on anything in particular and I can feel myself drifting.
I can see how this might discourage recruitment of auditory neurons, by allowing the full spectrum of frequencies to exercise the auditory cortex in a non-threatening way.

I was thinking the same thing; the Logan's Run soundtrack sounds quite simliar at times!

Looking forward to trying this on bad days.
 
I can't explain it but this neuromodulation sound is very calming. I somehow feel like I'm in some sort of a space odyssey altered dimension. Sure glad this collaboration produced such a wonderful cornucopia of out of this world sound. :headphone:
 
You could stack it with a white noise generator. Although I recommend using the grey noise generator as white noise is perceived by our hearing as uneven - due to the way we hear sound we are more sensitive to mid range frequencies, the normal hearing curve is a bit of a squiggly line whereas white noise is a completely flat line across the frequency spectrum.

@hoper When you click on the generator, using animate makes for an awesome soundscape. Or there are also presets there which sound pretty cool.

Stēphane took one of my neuromodulation sequences and mangled it beyond recognition to create this, it's like making a sculpture out of sound.

Hey Steve, this is pretty neat. Will this actually lower tinnitus over time?
 
Hey Steve, this is pretty neat. Will this actually lower tinnitus over time?
Hi Jason,

I couldn't make any bold claims (I'm sure Stephane wouldn't either and it is mostly his work), there's no testing or data to say anything other than it seems to be helpful. If it does help over the long term then that is excellent but at the very least it is a good masking or distracting tool, depending on how you set the mix up.
 
Hi Jason,

I couldn't make any bold claims (I'm sure Stephane wouldn't either and it is mostly his work), there's no testing or data to say anything other than it seems to be helpful. If it does help over the long term then that is excellent but at the very least it is a good masking or distracting tool, depending on how you set the mix up.

Okay, thanks so much Steve! It's very cool!
 
I like this one. You can create your own tones and listen for free or generate your own custom tones and download then for only $5.00. I have burned two CDs so far. In my opinion this is about the best sound therapy out there. I have nothing to gain by sharing this information and I save $4,200.00.

https://mynoise.net/NoiseMachines/neuromodulationTonesGenerator.php
 
I like this neural symphony a lot. For me, this is so much better than trying to use white or any of the other colored static noises that only serve to aggravate my tinnitus. This is awesome with the sliders, boost what you want, modify it a little to get it just right, pretty cool.

Thanks so much @Steve
 
The way the tones move around it's like the brain isn't able to focus on the tinnitus as much. I have made two CDs. One with relaxing tones and another one a little more aggressive with higher pitch and frequencies.
 
Mynoise.net is great. I use the iPhone app all the time and it has a lot of flexibility about equalizing and mixing multiple sources. I have just got the Nervana Vagus Stimulation device, and definitely one can get a very nice combo therapy in a budget. The days of corporate Tinnitus charging thousands of dollars for MP3 players and simple electrical stimulation devices are counted. On the downside, the benefits of these therapies are limited.
 
Why can't these sounds be more subliminal, so you can't hear them but the brain does. Then we could all have an implant with these sounds? Seriously...
 
What a bizarre, yet strangely soothing, set of sounds. I've had it playing through studio monitors for about an hour and a half, and twice during that time I noticed that I -didn't- notice my T. Thank you.
 

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