Traumatic Brain Injury and Post Concussion Syndrome For traumatic brain injury (TBI) and post concussion syndrome (PCS).


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Old 04-17-2015, 08:18 AM #1
krisgrt krisgrt is offline
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Join Date: Mar 2015
Posts: 22
8 yr Member
krisgrt krisgrt is offline
Junior Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2015
Posts: 22
8 yr Member
Default Great Info

I figured you had a lot of info but, I figured I would just check since we have the unique situation in our home of having a child with autism. Before having him, I would have never thought that headphones would work while ear plugs would not. I am glad that you wrote all you did because I will show it to my husband. I think it will be helpful with some plans he has for improvements in our church sanctuary. Thanks again for all your great info!

Quote:
Originally Posted by Mark in Idaho View Post
I have a very good understanding of my struggles. Sounds waves and noise are the same. The problem is multi-faceted. Very few auditoriums are acoustically correct. Speaker placement, wall construction and placement and other things all combine to cause a chaotic sound. My brain hears all of the echos. I have found the best spots to minimize the echos but still would be exhausted for the rest of the day.

btw, I have a friend who has been designing sound systems for churches for 30 years. He has helped me understand what those sound waves are doing. He has a difficult time designing good sound systems in buildings that are focused on maximum occupancy and visibility and not sound/acoustics. There are too many large flat walls reflecting the sound. Worse yet are to concrete walls that act like giant reflecting speakers. Even when he does his job well, the sound board people will mess it up with total disregard to his expertise and recommended settings.

Add to that the obscenely repetitive lyrics commonly used in CCM and my brain gets fried as those repetitions continue.

I use the foam ear plugs because they reduce the volume by the same decibel level as headphones, about 28 to 30 dB. With the foam plugs, I can still hear conversations because they mostly reduce the peak levels. Headphones reduce the whole spectrum. Plus, head phones create an echo within the headphone cups sort of like holding a sea shell up to your ear that competes with the sound. When I fly, I use both.

Your husband is so fortunate.
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