The ear-shattering secret weapon ‘Vuvuzela’ that can turn WC soccer fans deaf

Cape Town, June 4(ANI): Football fans travelling to the World Cup in South Africa are being warned to be prepared for a secret horn called ‘vuvuzela’, which is capable of creating an ear-shattering experience at the stadiums.

South African fans will be using ‘vuvuzela’ to inspire their players.

“The vuvuzela can reach 131 decibels, which is almost as loud as a gunshot,” The Sky News quoted Professor De Wet Swanpol, of Pretoria University, as saying.

“We have found that football fans exposed to the noise during just one game suffer some hearing loss,” he added.

The plastic instrument has made the officials advise visiting fans from all nations to wear earplugs to protect themselves.

According to reports, there were also calls for the vuvuzela to be banned during the World Cup, although FIFA denied receiving any official complaints.

Former England manager and current Thailand coach, Bryan Robson, confirmed that even players had faced problems due to the instrument, and said he was stunned by the noise at a recent friendly in South Africa.

“The atmosphere was fantastic, but it was too loud to communicate with my players,” Robson said. (ANI)

Mobile phone with ringtone as loud as speeding train wins over the elderly

London, June 4 (ANI): A mobile phone with a ringtone as loud as a pneumatic drill or speeding train is proving a hit among the elderly.

The Geemarc Clearsound CL8200,which has a top volume of 1,000 decibels, has been designed for the millions of elderly people who find modern mobile phones far too complex as well as far too quiet.

It is understood to be the loudest mobile phone on the market.

The phone, which has been manufactured by the British Company in Hertfordshire, has been on sale for a few months at specialist websites including the Royal National Institute for Deaf People, which says it has sold thousands.

Hearingdirect.com, which sells discounted hearing aids and other accessories, said that it had seen twice as many visitors to its site since the phone was launched.

“We have found a lot of our customers who are hard of hearing were fed up with the amount of unnecessary technology on other mobile phones and wanted a simple phone they could hear ringing, make calls and receive texts. They were tired of missing calls because they could not hear the ring and fiddling with small buttons. We think it”s going to be a big seller,” the Telegraph quoted Jamie Murray Wells, the chairman of HearingDirect.com, as saying.

As well as the ultra-loud ringtone, the phone also has a loud receiving tone, allowing listeners to hear their caller louder than normal.

This volume is 25 decibels as compared to a standard 8 to 10 decibel standard volume.

A spokesman for Geemarc, which is based in Hertfordshire, said: “There is a real need for a phone that doesn”t look like a disability phone, but which is really simple to use. There are a lot of elderly people frustrated at iPhones, and smart phones which can practically boil a kettle but are very difficult to use if you are hard of hearing or short sighted.”

The mobile phone costs 89.99 pounds, and comes with a pay-as-you-go SIM card, with 5 pounds worth of credit. It is also compatible with any other SIM card. (ANI)

Listening to iPods at ”jet” volume can make you deaf

London, Apr 21 (ANI): Listening to personal music players for several hours a day at high volume could put your hearing at risk, an expert has warned.

Writing in the British Medical Journal, Professor Peter Rabinowitz from Yale University School of Medicine said that personal music devices such as MP3 players and iPods can generate levels of sound at the ear in excess of 120 decibels, similar in intensity to a jet engine, especially when used with earphones that insert into the ear canal.

According to the expert, the use of such devices is high in young people and “has grown faster than our ability to assess their potential health consequences.”

“Personal music players provide a reminder that our hunger for new technology should be accompanied by equally vigorous efforts to understand and manage the health consequences of changing lifestyles,” he concluded. (ANI)

Noisy roads up high BP risk

Washington, Sept 10 (ANI): Individuals living near noisy roads are at greater risk of developing high blood pressure, according to a new study.

The study has been published in BioMed Central’s open access journal Environmental Health.

Theo Bodin worked with a team or researchers from Lund University Hospital, Sweden, to investigate the association between living close to noisy roads and having raised blood pressure.

He said, “Road traffic is the most important source of community noise. Non-auditory physical health effects that are biologically plausible in relation to noise exposure include changes in blood pressure, heart rate, and levels of stress hormones.

“We found that exposure above 60 decibels was associated with high blood pressure among the relatively young and middle-aged, an important risk factor for cardiovascular diseases such as heart attack and stroke”.

To reach the conclusion, Bodin and his colleagues used health survey questionnaires for 27,963 people living in Scania in southern Sweden and related this information to how close the respondents lived to busy roads. Modest exposure effects were generally noted in all age groups at average road noise levels below 60 dB(A). More marked effects were seen at higher exposure levels among relatively young and middle-aged people, whereas no effects at higher levels were discerned in the oldest age group (60 – 80 years old).

Speaking about this age-effect, Bodin said, “The effect of noise may become less important, or harder to detect, relative to other risk factors with increasing age. Alternatively, it could be that noise annoyance varies with age”.(ANI)

Some Aussie frogs raise pitch of love songs to counter traffic noise

Washington, Aug 26 (ANI): Some Aussie frogs often raise their pitch as they serenade their partners, in order to counter traffic sounds, according to a study.

Kirsten Parris, an ecologist at the University of Melbourne, says that one species of frog in Melbourne is changing the pitch of its love song to be heard above the roar of the road.

For the study, Parris visited many urban ponds and pools inhabited by frogs, measuring traffic noise, which is, unfortunately, at the same low frequencies as many frog mating calls.

But, for the onomatopoeic ‘pobblebonk’ (Limnodynastes dumerilii), she found that a call that could originally be heard by a female 800 metres away might only carry 98 metres above 60 decibels of traffic noise, an average value for Melbourne.

She has also discovered that the southern brown tree frog (Litoria ewingii) seems to be compensating for the traffic noise by increasing the pitch of its calls1 (listen to before and after calls).

Parris suggested that installing noise barriers at strategic points around a road could help urban frogs to hear each other.

She further said that creating habitats where they thrive – such as ponds with sloping rather than steep sides – would also make sense.

“Cities provide some of the last habitat for a range of frog species around the world. So if we only worry about conserving frogs and their habitats outside cities, some of these frogs may well go extinct,” she said.

She added: “Some frog species are very sensitive to environmental changes”, but “others are quite adaptable and can persist in urban habitats if we gave them a bit of help”.

However, Kris Kaiser, an ecology graduate student at the University of California, Los Angeles, has put forward a note of caution on the subject of these amphibians’ adaptability.

“Frogs, unlike birds, are thought to have the frequency of their calls somewhat constrained by their anatomy. There is often a relationship between body size and frequency of call,” he said.

Thus, he claimed that the creatures’ ability to compensate for traffic noise may be limited.

The study was presented at the International Congress of Ecology in Brisbane. (ANI)

Loudest grunter at Wimbledon insists she is not a cheat

London, June 22 (ANI): The row over Wimbledon’s grunting girls is getting louder, but the loudest offender insisted that she is not a cheat.

“I am not a cheat. They are part of my strokes,” insists Portuguese Michelle Larcher de Brito, 16, whose 109-decibel blast is same as an F1 car.

“I’ve always been loud but I’m not trying to distract opponents. When I don’t grunt it feels weird because it’s not me,” The Sun quoted her, as saying. he Williams sisters – Venus and Serena-have had their grunts recorded at 90 decibels, while Maria Sharapova gives a 103-decibel squeal.

Ex-Wimbledon champ Michael Stich stirred the controversy yesterday by saying women were there for “selling sex” on court and grunting was “unsexy”.

Earlier, Tennis legend Martina Navratilova, who won 18 grand slam titles, had called grunting female players cheats, and asked that something to be done to end the noise on court.

Navratilova used the presentation of an award for her service to the game to air her grievances to tennis leaders.

“Roger Federer doesn’t make a noise when he hits the ball-go and listen. The grunting has reached an unacceptable level. It is cheating, pure and simple. It is time for something to be done,” The Times quoted Navratilova, as saying.

The two-time French Open champion did not name any offenders. But the paper reported the assault on eardrums at the French Open this year was being led by Michelle Larcher De Brito, Victoria Azarenka, Serena Williams and Maria Sharapova.

Navratilova said: “I remember how it was when Monica (Seles) and I were competitors and she began to grunt. I couldn’t hear the ball. I thought to myself, ‘Do I mention it to the umpire, do I say something to her? What should I do?’ And Monica was a friend. I had to say something in the end.”

The grunting dispute with Seles began in 1992, with Navratilova complaining there was more to it than merely irritating the opposition. (ANI)

Farmers advised to use ear protection while feeding ‘squealing’ pigs

London, May 26 (ANI): Farmers have been advised to use ear protection when feeding pigs, to protect them from ‘deafening’ squeals.

The noise made by pigs during mealtimes can reach more than 100 decibels, louder than a chainsaw or powerdrill, the Health and Safety Executive has warned.

It has produced a leaflet entitled Farmwise – An Essential Guide to Health and Safety in Farming, recommending farmers to wear earmuffs or stay away from pigs while they are eating, reports the Telegraph.

The leaflet said: “Large numbers of pigs in a building can create noise levels of 100 decibels or above, especially at feeding time,” according to the leaflet.

The leaflet also suggested that even short-term exposure could be harmful, particularly if workers are exposed to other sources of noise during the day.

“Use mechanical or automated feeding systems to reduce the need to enter the building when it is noisiest, e.g. at feeding time. Make sure any work requiring entry is done during quieter periods,” the leaflet added.

HSE inspector Tony Mitchell said that the noise in pig farms only becomes a problem where hundreds of pigs are kept in close confinement in giant sheds.

“If you can imagine a shed with three to 400 hungry sows waiting for you to come and feed them and they are all squealing at the same time, the noise they make can be quite dramatic,” he said.

“But it’s not an issue if you have an automated feeding system you can switch on from the outside. Once the pigs are feeding they are quiet.

“If you are feeding pigs with a barrow of feed with a scoop for each pig you could be exposed to that noise for quite some time,” he added. (ANI)

Mumbai Police to launch no- honking campaign

Mumbai, Feb 5 (ANI): In a bid to bring down noise pollution, the traffic police in Mumbai has launched a no-honking campaign from Thursday.

The campaign aims to educate motorists on the need to avoid unnecessary honking. The traffic police will focus on roads like Mohammad Ali Road that produces the maximum noise pollution.

Around a hundred placards and banners will be put up in several parts of the city to discourage motorists from honking excessively.

Motorists accused of pointless honking will be fined Rs. 100, and repeated offenders may even face cancellation of their driving licenses.

The campaign is likely to be carried out for over a week.

The Idea Academy of theatre artists will also cooperate in the campaign by performing street plays on the adverse effects of unnecessary street honking on health.

Experts believe that continuous noise levels in excess of 90 decibels can cause loss of hearing and irreversible changes in nervous systems. The World Health Organization [WHO] has fixed 45 decibels as the safe noise level for a city.

Metropolitan areas in India usually register an average more than 90 decibels. Mumbai is rated the third noisiest city in the world, with New Delhi following closely.

Mumbai has a whopping 1.5 million vehicles including 110,000 auto-rickshaws and 55,000 taxis.

About 17 lakh vehicles ply on the city roads everyday.

According to a survey, most of the upper middle class households residing in metro cities own more than one vehicle. (ANI)