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How to stop headphones damaging your hearing

How to stop headphones damaging your hearing

With our lives increasingly spent plugged into our phones and computers, you possibly find your ears are frequently sporting headphones. As it stands, one in six Australians suffers from hearing loss, and the number is expected to rise to one in four by 2050, says...

Intersectionality in the Deaf community: video

Intersectionality in the Deaf community: video

In this episode of Our Deaf Ways, First Nations Australian Sue Frank and Petra Svab discuss how their attitudes have been shaped by their experiences, and the layered barriers they have faced.   Watch the video by Deaf Australia on Youtube The recently-released...

Gael Hannan writes about Parenting with hearing loss

Gael Hannan writes about Parenting with hearing loss

Being a mother has been the most wonderful relationship in my life but, in many ways, the most challenging. As I waited for my son to be born, I felt that my role as a mother was to give him three things: love, safety, and the communication skills to help him make the...

Cocktail Party Effect is not exclusive to human hearing

Cocktail Party Effect is not exclusive to human hearing

Many people have trouble following conversations in a noisy space. Carnegie Mellon University’s Barbara Shinn-Cunningham has spent her career conducting research to better understand this problem and how it affects people at cocktail parties, coffee shops and grocery...

Excessive noise is an environmental issue

Excessive noise is an environmental issue

Excessive noise is an often-neglected form of environmental pollution. We are constantly bombarded by excessive noise — from leaf blowers and lawn mowers, motorcycles, loud car stereos, barking dogs, helicopters, airplanes, noisy neighbours, car traffic, raucous...