If you're 100% deaf in one ear...

Soldato
Joined
4 Aug 2006
Posts
2,589
Are you unable to determine if a sound is coming from behind or ahead? Just purely from the sound - no visual clues.

Your ear hears a sound and on it's own there's no way your ear knows where it has come from. The brain interprets position thanks to your two ears receiving the sounds at different times etc.

This leads me to wonder how we determine sounds from above and below - as we don't have ears at different heights to interpret the varaiances on that plane.
 
Yes. Being deaf in one ear changes the direction that you perceive sound from.

To test this, stick a finger in one of your ears, and try seeing if you can locate where sounds are coming from.

The way we determine whether something is coming from behind, in front, above or below is surely simple deduction, and use of the other senses as well.
 
I went deaf in one ear a while back and would get confused when trying to figure out where sounds were coming from :(
 
Yes. Being deaf in one ear changes the direction that you perceive sound from.

To test this, stick a finger in one of your ears, and try seeing if you can locate where sounds are coming from.

The way we determine whether something is coming from behind, in front, above or below is surely simple deduction, and use of the other senses as well.

Blocking your ear is not a good way to test, as sounds still pass through your skull. I believe the skull attenuates up to 40db. That's why I asked if you were 100% deaf in one of your ears.
 
Im pretty sure the brain/ear would compensate fairly reasonably...

People with 2 ears cant quite pinpoint the direction of a brief noise, that's why snipers leave time between shots, the brain can't quite make out the direction from a single noise.

Same reason that forklift drivers beep twice insted of once when going through shutters/round corners.. the second noise helps the brain 'triangulate' the position of the source.
 
To test this, stick a finger in one of your ears, and try seeing if you can locate where sounds are coming from.

I think that given sufficient time to acclimatise to the deafness in one ear your ability to perceive the location of sounds would increase.
 
I'm nearly deaf in my right ear and I have major problems locating where a sound comes from.
One woman in my office refused to tell me which phones were ringing and instead preferred to get angry with me (we have to pick other peoples calls up if they aren't in).
Eventually the Manager (who had heard her time & time again) had enough of her attitude towards my 'disability' and had her in the office for a telling off.

So the answer is 100% yes.
 
As I say, I can understand how our ears determine position from left or right, but if a sound is directly above or below us, how do the ears determine that?
 
Can't you get an aid for that ear?

I bought one of these the other week ( http://www.ampliear.co.uk/index.php?pac=PERI26JAN12 )and to get any decent volume it of it, it began squealing (feedback).
Mrs Dimple keeps telling me go to the Doctors to get it sorted properly.

This is how much my hearing in the right ear has deteriorated in 2 years -

hearing.jpg
 
I'm pretty much deaf in one ear as of about this time last year and I struggle to hear where sounds come from. Also, if someone talks to me from the right and I don't see them then I'll probably not hear them at all :D.

I always stick only one earphone in during work, cause the muffled sound of my right ear ruins the sound. It looks like I'm not wearing earphones from the right so people come up and chat away to me and I just completely ignore them without realising :D The guy on my right thought I was a right ignorant barsteward until I explained it to him one day
 
Maybe you should listen to your wife then Pool! Get it sorted out, you might even enjoy music more being able to hear it in both ears :p
 
I'm nearly deaf in my right ear and I have major problems locating where a sound comes from.
One woman in my office refused to tell me which phones were ringing and instead preferred to get angry with me (we have to pick other peoples calls up if they aren't in).
Eventually the Manager (who had heard her time & time again) had enough of her attitude towards my 'disability' and had her in the office for a telling off.

So the answer is 100% yes.

How good is the hearing in your other ear?
 
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