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  2. If you have pure-tone tinnitus, this online frequency generator can help you determine its frequency. Knowing your tinnitus frequency can enable you to better target masking sounds and frequency discrimination training.

  3. Tomasz P. Szynalski

    www.szynalski.com

    Online Tone Generator – generate audio signals of any frequency; TypeIt – handy tool for typing foreign and special characters:

  4. Channel: Left Right Both Random. Frequencies: Standard (311 – 8372 Hz) From Hz to Hz target tinnitus freq. Before you start, you should calibrate your volume to make sure different frequencies sound equally loud to you. Restore defaults.

  5. About « Hope This Helps - Szynalski

    blog.szynalski.com/about

    Thinking more about this – set one frequency to 440 Hz and a second frequency to 441 Hz – we hear a 1 Hz beat. Change the second freq to 442 Hz we hear a 2 Hz beat.

  6. Does listening to a 40 Hz tone “clean up” the brain in...

    blog.szynalski.com/2018/03/40-hz-tone-alzheimers

    In 2012, I made a Web-based tone generator with the goal of helping tinnitus patients determine the frequency of their tinnitus to better target therapy.

  7. Plasticity and tinnitus | Plasticity - Szynalski

    plasticity.szynalski.com/tinnitus

    If you would like to estimate your tinnitus frequency, try generating various frequencies using my online tone generator and check which one matches your tinnitus most closely. Note: Once you find a frequency that matches, also try sounds that are one octave lower (frequency divided by 2) and one octave higher (frequency multiplied by 2).

  8. Online Tone Generator - Privacy Policy - Szynalski

    www.szynalski.com/tone-generator/privacy.htm

    The Online Tone Generator uses its own cookies (and similar technologies) to improve your experience, for example to remember your preferences. In addition, it uses Google cookies (and similar technologies) to analyze traffic and serve ads.

  9. Web Audio API – things I learned the hard way

    blog.szynalski.com/2014/04/web-audio-api

    Firefox recently dropped support for the Mozilla Audio Data API, so I started porting my two audio-enabled Web apps (Plasticity and Online Tone Generator) to the Web Audio API, which is the W3C-blessed standard way to work with audio in the browser.