Hearing voices in your head usually isn't something you'd share in a casual comment to a psychiatrist, or to your doctor, or even to your closest friends. Most of us have had the experience of hearing something others around us haven't, just for a moment, and 3 to 10% of the population, experts believe, regularly experiences auditory hallucinations. (Not everyone believes what they hear.) But with help from Nesta, the British innovation charity, London resident Frank Swain and his friend sound artist Daniel Jones built Phantom Terrains, an experimental tool for making Wi-Fi fields audible.
Why Would Anyone Want To Listen To Wi-Fi?
Mr Swain has hacked into his hearing so he can hear not just birds singing and horns honking and people in conversation, but also the intensity of wi-fi signals everywhere he goes. As Swain walks past a hot spot, he hears a familiar gurgle. As he steps down into London's famous subway tube, the sound fades.
Phantom Terrains picks up field strength, router name, encryption, and distance. Picking up these variables is something just about any computer can do nowadays, but encoding them into an audible signal was a much more challenging feat. Swain told the British publication New Scientist:
"On a busy street, we may see over a hundred independent wireless access points within signal range. The strength of the signal, direction, name and security level on these are translated into an audio stream made up of a foreground and background layer: distant signals click and pop like hits on a Geiger counter, while the strongest bleat their network ID in a looped melody. This audio is streamed constantly to a pair of hearing aids donated by US developer Starkey. The extra sound layer is blended with the normal output of the hearing aids; it simply becomes part of my soundscape. So long as I carry my phone with me, I will always be able to hear Wi-Fi."
Hearing Aids Harder To Hack Than Visual Aids
Correcting defective vision, Swain opines, is a much easier task than amplifying hearing. Vision problems often can be corrected with a lens designed to bring light into focus.
Sorting useful sound from noise takes a great deal of programming, especially when the sounds are those that most people never get to hear.
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The signals Phantom Terrains software converts into sound for Swain are a kind of social landscape of the world in which he lives. Residential wi-fi systems send out signals with low-level decoding. Commercial wi-fi systems are usually encoded. The numbers and strengths of signals tell Swain a lot about what is going on in the buildings he passes as he walks through London, although he does not have the ability to listen in on or hack individual Internet activities.
Listening To The Internet More Than A Pastime
Why would anyone want to listen to hums, crackles, gurgles, and beeps all day, overlaying the usual sounds of everyday life? Swain says that he is not entirely sure himself, and he does not know how long he will tolerate the additional auditory input he receives through his hearing aids. However, he says his use of the technology he and Jones created is about more than just a social commentary on the ubiquity of the Internet.
We already talk to our computers, especially if we use Apple's Siri, Google's OK, or Microsoft's Cortana.
Our tablets and laptops are still trapped in their boxes, but we can become aware of their presence through technologies like Swain's.
A Natural Progression From Hearing Aid Technology
Swain and Jones did not, fortunately, have to invent the hardware to go along with their software. The ReSound and Halo hearing aids made by Starkey Corporation already have the ability to use Bluetooth to connect with iPhones. This makes fine tuning hearing aids easier, but it also elevates hearing aids into an Internet connectivity tool. Hearing aids can function in ways similar to Google Glass, as a kind of advisor in the background throughout the day.
Listening To Data
Swain and Jones take this idea a step further by suggesting that just as their program changes data about Internet activity into sound, other numerical data could also be transformed into sound. Suppose, for example, you are a stock analyst. You spend your entire day looking at charts and graphs and quantitative indicators. You make decisions about when to buy and when to sell on the basis of enormous amounts of data, and you have to keep your eyes peeled to the computer screen to make the right decisions.
Phantom Terrains technology might convert that stream of numerical and statistical data into sound. Oversimplifying the technology a bit, it might be possible to associate rising prices with rising tones, and falling prices with falling tones.
It might be possible to overlay the "sounds" of stock transactions into a smartphone app that doesn't interfere with conversations or everyday sounds around the office, allowing analysts to attend to other tasks, while keeping them in constant touch with their most important trading priorities for the day. Analysts would not have to rely on instant alerts, because they would have been following their target trades all day, but through sound, not through constantly changing numbers, charts, and data.
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Getting Used To New Inputs Will Take Some Time
All of this new information, of course, will take a while to get used to. Just as cataract patients don't see clearly for a few days to a few months while their eyes are getting used to greatly improved vision, and people who have not been able to hear for years have to spend some getting used to being able to hear again, it will probably take a time to wrap your brain around the ability to hear the Internet or to hear data streams relevant to your work or hobbies. But the ability to hear things other can't, using technology, not superpowers, is sure to provide enormous advantages in work and play.
Sources & Links
- Swain,Frank. The man who can hear Wi-Fi wherever he walks. New Scientist. 12 November 2014.Photo courtesy of Woodleywonderworks by Flickr: www.flickr.com/photos/wwworks/5349327692
- Photo courtesy of Dr Stephen Dann by Flickr: www.flickr.com/photos/stephendann/3237846153