Designing hearing aids for people with severe-to-profound hearing loss is one of the biggest challenges confronting hearing-aid manufacturers.
That’s why Oticon’s latest high-end hearing aid is so refreshing: the new Sumo DM, designed specifically for severely impaired users, takes on the technology problems at the high end of the market with gusto. I even like the name Oticon gave to the new product and its associations with super-strong Japanese Sumo wrestlers.
“Because they represent a smaller percentage of hearing impaired people, the needs of individuals with severe-to-profound hearing loss are sometimes overlooked when developing new technologies,” Gordon Wilson, Vice President of Marketing at Oticon, Inc., said in a press release. “At Oticon, we have a long-standing history of producing high quality, state-of-the-art power hearing instruments for this special group of users. We understand their unique needs.” Oticon bills the Sumo DM as “the smallest digital Super Power instrument in the world,” packing all its power into a form factor not much larger than the new, slimmed-down behind-the-ear (BTE) designs for that are becoming standard for mainstream users. That’s impressive because the electronics required to deliver multiple features along with the very high amplification are substantial.
“The Sumo DM incorporates the most advanced features you will see in a Super Power hearing aid,” said Oticon Product Manager Maureen Doty, who gave a presentation at the annual SHHH (Self-Help for Hard of Hearing People) convention earlier this month. The Sumo DM features Oticon’s “TriState Noise Management” technology, which senses shifts from quiet to noisier to noisiest environments and automatically changes programs, saving the user the trouble of manually changing the hearing aid’s volume and program settings. The system also uses Oticon’s “VoiceFinder” technology to make speech more intelligible in noise. And it integrates eight audio channels, enabling more sophisticated mapping of amplification to the unique pattern of hearing loss at different frequencies in the user’s personal audiogram than is possible with many other high-end devices currently on the market. The system also includes Oticon’s new Dynamic Feedback Cancellation technology, a sophisticated solution which detects feedback and generates sound waves that automatically counter and cancel the noise.
Power is as power does. It’s nice to see a major manufacturer taking the lead in driving the best new technologies into the hardest-of-hearing market niche. And let me make a final comment on the name: at the SHHH convention, one of the listeners in the audience complained that naming the new digital product Sumo DM was a “terrible marketing decision” because Oticon’s venerable line of analog high-performance products also carries the Sumo name. I beg to differ. Whether it be analog or digital, power is power, and in my book, Sumo is as Sumo does.