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An estimated 1 in 3 Americans are exposed to harmful levels of noise on a regular basis, based on data gathered as part of the Apple Hearing Study. In recognition of International Noise Awareness Day, University of Michigan researchers working on the hearing study in partnership with Apple shared a blog post noise exposure.

excessive-noise-apple-watch.jpg

Extrapolating data collected from 130,000 Apple Hearing Study volunteers who contributed readings from their Apple Watch between November 2019 and December 2022, the University of Michigan estimated that 77 million adults across the United States are consistently exposed to high noise levels.

According to the World Health Organization and the United States Environmental Protection Agency, an annual average noise exposure level of 70 decibels (dBA) poses no risk for hearing loss, but exposure over 70 dBA can result in damage to hearing.

The study assumes that people with repeated daily average noise exposures over 70 dBA likely have an annual noise exposure over 70 dBA, which researchers say can result in hearing issues, irritation, heart problems, and sleep disturbances, in addition to impacting mental health. Higher noise levels for longer time periods can increase risk.

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The Apple Watch has a built-in feature for detecting environmental sound level, and it collects data to tabulate an average daily environmental sound exposure level. The information collected by the watch can be located in the Hearing section of the Health app.

The Health app will let you know if your noise exposure levels are below 75 dB on average and are "OK," or if you have been repeatedly exposed to higher levels of sound that can impact your health. At 80 dB, 40 hours of exposure over seven days could potentially result in damage, but at 120 dB, 14 seconds over seven days could cause problems. The Apple Watch is able to send an alert when it detects a harmful noise level so you can move to a quieter location.

People in Puerto Rico, Delaware, Rhode Island, Mississippi, and Connecticut experienced the highest noise pollution levels, and adults aged 35 to 44 were more likely to be exposed to high noise levels compared to those in other age groups.

Additional details about the study can be found in the full blog post on the University of Michigan website. To cut down on hearing damage, researchers recommend that those regularly exposed to excessive noise pollution move away from noisy areas and take "quiet breaks," buy quiet appliances, and wear ear muffs and ear plugs when possible.

Article Link: Apple Hearing Study Suggests An Estimated 1 in 3 Americans Are Regularly Exposed to Excessive Noise
 
Probably inaccurate since every time I wash my hands (which my Apple Watch can detect) and use a hand dryer immediately after, my watch thinks my eardrums are being blown out.

You’d think it would be logical to disregard “loud noises” for at least 30-60 seconds after handwashing has been detected.
 
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What they do not write is that the #1 cause of ear damage is due to earphones. Guess what brand is on top of the list?

That being said Apple does have a neat implementation for safe use of their Airpods.

Wait for the eye damage report and the device that causes it! Spoiler: Watch WWDC 2023.
 
What I get from this study is that Apple is saying that 1 in 3 Americans are mentally not okay. 🤣🤔

An estimated 1 in 3 Americans are exposed to harmful levels of noise on a regular basis… blah, blah, blah… The study assumes that people with repeated daily average noise exposures over 70 dBA… blah, blah, blah… in addition to impacting mental health.
 
Using the link, the study's information is inconclusive and not helpful as it does Not state what's causing the high levels of noise.
Depends on your state and area.

Also, this doesn't help either:

"Portsmouth, NH-ME, Not enough data, Cannot rank.
Hispanic, White, and Other race adults in New Hampshire were exposed to similar levels of excessive noise pollution. No estimation was possible for Black and Asian adults in New Hampshire."
 
The loud noise alerts are a bit annoying, they go off on my AW Ultra every time I put a weight plate on an exercise bar at the gym. Have to look at the settings to see if I can adjust it to only go off for continuous noise, not just a single noise.
 
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What I get from this study is that Apple is saying that 1 in 3 Americans are mentally not okay. 🤣🤔

An estimated 1 in 3 Americans are exposed to harmful levels of noise on a regular basis… blah, blah, blah… The study assumes that people with repeated daily average noise exposures over 70 dBA… blah, blah, blah… in addition to impacting mental health.
How does it work if mentally not okay people hear sounds that others not hear?
 
What about transition from Dolby Atmos track to a standard stereo one in Apple Music. Quite a change of volume and can be hurtful using headphones or AirPods, even with Sound check enabled. If they’re too concerned about exposure to loud sounds they need to fix that!
 
What about transition from Dolby Atmos track to a standard stereo one in Apple Music. Quite a change of volume and can be hurtful using headphones or AirPods, even with Sound check enabled. If they’re too concerned about exposure to loud sounds they need to fix that!
It's a business case. Did you read about how they want to make Airpods beneficial for hearing loss? This answers your question. So you become deaf due to Airpods, but need them to regain your hearing.

This will be the same for the Goggles.
 
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It's a business case. Did you read about how they want to make Airpods beneficial for hearing loss? This answers your question. So you become deaf due to Airpods, but need them to regain your hearing.

This will be the same for the Goggles.
That’s anticompetitive!

/me is gonna call Margrethe Vestager

We need a Customer Mutilation Act
 
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I was in that study. Every few weeks it wanted me to do a hearing test using my AirPods. The test is way too long. It's just tedious, trying to listen to tone after tone after tone after MF tone at various levels.

I'm sure the dropout rate was very high. Whoever designed that test was thinking only about the data and not the people they were asking to do it.
 
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