Early Blindness Sharpens Sense of Sound 46
squidfrog writes "Canadian researchers (articles here, here, and here) have released findings that 'compare the hearing perception of people who lost their sight by age 2, individuals who went blind between the ages 5 and 45, and people with normal vision. The test involved listening to a series of two tones. For each set of tones, subjects had to determine whether the pitch was rising or falling.' 'It has long been known that blind people are far better than their sighted counterparts at orientating themselves by sound... this latest research has found that blind people are also up to 10 times better at discerning pitch changes than the sighted, but only when they went blind before the age of two.'"
the blind.... (Score:1, Funny)
Of course, my right ear still has no ringing in it (age 29 now), but if I concentrate, I can tell my left ear still rings. There are days I wish I hadn't lit that firecracker... but you only live once!
Re:the blind.... (Score:3, Interesting)
However, have you ever tried white-noise therapy? It does give some sense of 'relief' to the constant ringing sound. Whenever I go to a live show that's especially loud, on the way back, I set the car radio between stations (the static is pretty close to white noise) and it 'counter-acts' the ringing a bit - so much so that it allows those in the car to have a conversation without having to yell. Ocean wave sounds have a simliar effect.
Ringing In Ears (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm 37, and just found out this past year (at my grandmother's funeral) why I've always had a clear, pure tone in both ears. When I was 5 months old, a small-town fireworks display went bad, resulting in a huge blast that shook the whole area. I don't ever remember *not* hearing the tone -- I can hear it right now if I focus on it.
I don't think I'd want the sound to go away. It's my soun
Re:Ringing In Ears (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Ringing In Ears (Score:2)
Re:Ringing In Ears (Score:1)
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Re:Ringing In Ears (Score:1)
I just never really thought about it i suppose. Glad to see i'm not the only freak tho
Re:Ringing In Ears (Score:1)
Re:Ringing In Ears (Score:2)
I hear it too (Score:1)
Let's mention (Score:4, Interesting)
Really, it's great to have a study that confirms the mechanism, but given the number of brilliant blind musicians, it's no surprise.
Re:Let's mention (Score:4, Interesting)
I think that there would be some question as to whether it was an increased sense of hearing that made them great musicians or did their lack of sight motivate them to excel in the art of one of their remaining senses?
Re:Let's mention (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Let's mention (Score:2)
Re:Let's mention (Score:1)
Re:Let's mention (Score:2)
The guy merely had more talent in his little finger than most of today's most popular musicians have in their whole bank of voice sequencers and chorus machines. How boring.
Re:Let's mention (Score:2)
But it's not like anyone is claiming that blindness the the only reason Ray -- or Little Stevie Wonder -- was talented.
Re:Let's mention (Score:1)
I have a similar story (Score:2, Funny)
I was born premature and have impaired hearing.
My body compensated and now I have an elevated sense of self importance.
Not just early blindness (Score:4, Interesting)
Then after many days remaining blindfolded, they were asked again to do some braille reading. The accuracy would improve and amazingly enough the part of the brain related to visual processing would show activity showing it was taking on some new tasks. After this the blindfolds were taken off and after a few hours of rest, the braille reading accuracy dropped and brain activity went back to normal.
Re:Not just early blindness (Score:1)
Re:They are wrong! (Score:5, Interesting)
Otherwise, your occipital lobe is almost exclusively used for processing visual information. Losing your eyesight later in life won't change that. Music practice certainly won't change that.
Some congenitally blind subjects can develop a "face sense" that allows them to hear and process the sound of their own movements echoing off nearby objects, and thus detect their presence and general location. Music practice certainly won't change that either.
"Face Sense" (Score:2, Informative)
Some congenitally blind subjects can develop a "face sense" that allows them to hear and process the sound of their own movements echoing off nearby objects, and thus detect their presence and general location. Music practice certainly won't change that either.
^_^ And as I understand it, seeing people can also manage this mystic "face sense" if they put a little time into it. Try it some time. Stand in a relatively quiet room and clap your hands. Take a step forward and clap again. Notice the difference?
Re:"Face Sense" (Score:2)
I have a hard time believing you. Yes, perhaps sighted people can learn to listen for the sounds produced by echoes of their own movement off nearby objects, like a wall. But I don't think they can acquire face sense:
Re:They are wrong! (Score:2)
They're some of our closest non-primate relatives, also having descended from tree shrews.
Re:They are wrong! (Score:2)
"Only the blind subjects who had become blind before the age of two had a clearly superior performance. Late blind subjects, people who became blind after the age of five, were no different from the control subjects."
They attribute it to brain plasticity in infants. Yes, late blind people and musicians do have better hearing, but that is more from learning than
Re:They are wrong! (Score:2)
Infants and young children have more brain plasticity, but everybody has it to some degree. I've seen an 8 year old have a left hemispherectomy after a Wada test showed he language centers were on the left side, and she learned to speak with only a right hemis
Daredevil! (Score:2)
That basic idea is the premise of what happened to him. He lost his sight, and it extremely improved his other senses. To put a little comic book spin on it, though, they incorporated the angle that it was some kind of radioactive waste that splashed in his face so that it caused a more extreme heightening of his senses than a normal person.
Re:Daredevil! (Score:3, Funny)
adaptations (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:adaptations (Score:2, Interesting)
To me, the main disadvantage I could say her deafness brought her was that she never learned to speak English. She could speak Greek so well, and lip-read Greek so well, that people very often refused to believe she was deaf. [I tested whether she could hear an electric guitar amplified beyond my pain threshold -- no dice]. We'd h
In other news... (Score:1, Funny)
People who lose their legs early in life have stronger and have more dexterity in their arms than people who don't.
As the wise man said... (Score:2)
(O Brother, Where Art Thou?)
steve
What about... (Score:1)
human experimentation (Score:2)
Yes, the logistics of this is mind-boggling, as is the thought
They can tell 2600 Hz when they hear it (Score:1)
Re:They can tell 2600 Hz when they hear it (Score:2)