Medicine & TechnologyBoth blind and sighted people could train to navigate their surroundings and evade obstacles by just using echoes from the clicking of their tongues. Read more about the echolocation experiment in humans and how effective it is.
A renowned voice-changing application will get an improvement through AI and will be available for beta testing this week. Learn more about the Voicemod program and how it works.
Listen to this soothing soundtrack that NASA researchers have converted Sonification from a black hole. Read on to know how they recorded the sound from space.
Columbia University recently developed an algorithm that could protect our privacy from AI. Read on how the technique works against invasive smart device microphones and creepy personalized ads.
The hype on air flights that surpass the speed of sound becomes more and more interesting. Read more about this new hypersonic flight simulation by NASA, which uses AI-based and machine learning computations.
A startup by University of Oxford develops a novel approach to generate power using nuclear fusion. Read more to know how the simpler and more efficient process works.
A new study shows how sound exists on Mars. Read on to know how fast sound travels on the red planet and how it benefits our Martian studies in the future.
Researchers recently developed a new approach to measure atomic bonds and nature, revealing that a sound's speed depends on the structure it travels through.
Researchers from the California Institute of Technology developed a safe new technique that can see how individual cells behave using acoustic reporter genes that react to ultrasound microwaves.
A new bed could heal the body and promises emotional fitness by only using spatial audio and vibroacoustic technology that sends low-frequency vibrations throughout the body.
Whoever thought coronavirus could create such beautiful sounds? For a virus that is feared worldwide, it produces such a calming melody that can drift you off to sleep. Scientists are studying the structure of the coronavirus through sonification to determine the virus' weak spot. These efforts are in line with finding a cure for the disease. Click to hear how coronavirus sounds.
Have you ever dealt with that constant ringing in your ears that just won’t seem to go away? You are not alone, according to researchers one in every five people is affected with the problem. The medical condition, known as Tinnitus, causes patients to hear a constant ringing in their ears. However, researchers have now discovered that tinnitus varies greatly from person to person and in some cases the ringing may not actually be there at all.