Skip to main content

New A.I. hearing aid learns your listening preferences and makes adjustments

One of the picks for this year’s CES 2021 Innovation Awards is a smart hearing aid that uses artificial intelligence to improve the audio experience in a couple of crucial ways.

Among the improvements the Widex Moment makes to conventional hearing aids is reducing the standard sound delay experienced by wearers from 7 to 10 milliseconds seconds down to just 0.5 milliseconds. This results in a more natural sound experience for users, rather than the out-of-sync audio experience people have had to settle for up until now.

The Widex Moment hearing aid also uses A.I. machine learning to discover and adapt to how users want to hear the world around them — for instance, having different personalized settings for rooms of their house or, say, for when they’re at work versus being in the supermarket. These can be easily set using simple A/B comparisons and millions of user settings stored in the cloud. The purpose is to craft an individual hearing experience for users, based on context, content, and intent.

Widex Moment
Widex

The hearing aid of the future, right now

“Everyone’s hearing preferences are different, and the purpose of our artificial intelligence is to personalize sound for each wearer to create a better overall experience,” James Martin, director of audiological communication at Widex, told Digital Trends. “By applying artificial intelligence, a hearing solution learns how users prefer various listening environments and gives them greater control over their hearing experience. For example, a wearer may have a different preference when in a noisy restaurant trying to have a conversation than when they are walking in the park alone.”

While this year’s all-digital CES, which commenced Monday and runs through Thursday, is full of innovative futuristic technology, accessibility tools such as this have the potential to transform lives in a way that few other pieces of tech can.

Even better: Although plenty of the products on (virtual) display at this year’s CES are still months, if not years, away from shipping to customers, Widex Moment is a little more immediate in its timeline. “Widex Moment is available now through audiologists,” Martin said. “You can visit our website to find a hearing partner in your area.”

Editors' Recommendations

Luke Dormehl
I'm a UK-based tech writer covering Cool Tech at Digital Trends. I've also written for Fast Company, Wired, the Guardian…
A.I. cameras could help stomp out wildfires before they become disastrous
smart sensor wildfires detection wildfire

Helping Fight Wildfires with AI, IoT and Weather technology

This summer marks one year since California’s deadliest and most destructive wildfire season ever. And while not for a second diminishing the devastation caused by that disaster, it’s not an isolated event. Many countries around the world are experiencing unprecedented heat waves, which pose similar fire risks. Could cutting-edge technology help?

Read more
A learning bias found in kids could help make A.I. technology better
How to take kids photos

The theory behind machine learning tools that are like neural networks is that they function and, more specifically, learn in a similar way to the human brain. Just as we discover the world through trial and error, so too does modern artificial intelligence. In practice, however, things are a bit different. There are aspects of childhood learning that machines can’t replicate -- and they’re one of the things which, in many domains, make humans superior learners.

Researchers at New York University are working to change that. Researchers Kanishk Gandhi and Brenden Lake have explored how something called “mutual exclusivity bias,” which is present in kids, could help make A.I. better when it comes to learning tasks like understanding language.

Read more
New A.I. and voice synthesis makes Gatebox your cutest, cleverest digital pal
gatebox line clova ai news and

The concept of living at home with an intelligent digital character is almost a reality, due to a partnership between Line, the popular messaging app, and Gatebox, a cult Japanese artificial intelligence (A.I.) company. Line supplies its Clova A.I. platform to Gatebox, where it will be integrated into the production version of its smart home hardware. Think of Gatebox as a little like Amazon’s Alexa, but the difference is, Gatebox has a friendly, interactive digital character inside, ready to communicate naturally with you both in and out of your home. It’s a big step beyond the basic interactions we have with Alexa or Google Assistant.

While the partnership between these two companies had been revealed when Line acquired Gatebox in early 2018, the result of how Clova will work with Gatebox has now been demonstrated at the Line Conference currently taking place in Japan. Clova is Line’s A.I. platform that powers its smart home speakers, operating in the same way as Alexa. The integration with Gatebox brings A.I. smarts to the charming digital character living inside the sci-fi hardware.

Read more