TECH

Software platform helps users find the best hearing protection
The world is loud. A walk down the street bombards one's ears with the sound of engines revving, car horns blaring, and the steady beeps of pedestrian crossings. While smartphone alerts to excessive sound and public awareness of noise exposure grows, few tools help people take protective action.
The Hearing Protection Optimization Tool (HPOT) is a software platform developed by researchers at Applied Research Associates, Inc. to help users select the most appropriate hearing protection device (HPD) for their specific noise environment. It moves beyond traditional Noise Reduction Ratings (NRR) to provide a more personalized, data-driven selection process.
How the HPOT Works...The tool simplifies complex acoustic and psychoacoustic factors into clear, visual information that helps users compare different HPDs. It incorporates the following steps:
Environmental Assessment: Users input information about their specific noise environment, such as sound intensity and exposure duration. If exact measurements are unavailable, the platform can estimate exposure levels based on user descriptions.
Algorithmic Analysis: The software uses algorithmic analyses of different HPD benefits to match users with suitable, regulatory-approved devices from a database.
Customization: Users can adjust inputs for factors like communication needs, mobility, cost, and power requirements to visualize trade-offs and optimize their selection based on personal preferences.
Benefits and Applications...While initially developed for military use, the creators envision the HPOT being useful for a wide range of applications, from workplace safety to personal use (e.g., concerts).
Key benefits include:
Personalized Selection: It helps users find the optimal fit and protection level for their unique needs, rather than relying solely on a generic NRR.
Improved Understanding: By translating complex science into usable information, it empowers users to make smarter decisions about their hearing health.
Integration with Fit Testing: The concept aligns with the growing recommendation from organizations like the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) to use individual, quantitative fit testing (QNFT) to measure a Personal Attenuation Rating (PAR) for each worker, ensuring the device actually works as expected in the real world.
Introducing a new hearing protection tool...To address this gap, Santino Cozza and a team from Applied Research Associates, Inc. developed the Hearing Protection Optimization Tool (HPOT). HPOT was designed to move beyond traditional noise reduction ratings and highlight performance characteristics that matter in real-world conditions.
This user-friendly software platform, which draws on years of research and operational insight, helps people select the appropriate hearing protection device (HPD) for their specific environment.
Cozza presented the software at the Sixth Joint Meeting of the Acoustical Society of America and Acoustical Society of Japan, running Dec. 1–5 in Honolulu, Hawaii.
The HPOT platform in use. Credit: Shebly WratherHow HPOT works and its benefits..."The underlying science of how humans perceive sound is complex, drawing from acoustics, psychology, and physiology," said Cozza. "We designed HPOT to translate that into something usable, empowering smarter, more personalized hearing protection."
HPOT asks users to share basic information about their noise environment, such as sound intensity and exposure duration. If measurements aren't available, the platform estimates exposure levels based on users' descriptions of their setting.
By combining noise exposure levels with algorithmic analyses of the benefits of different HPDs, HPOT matches users with a database of suitable, regulatory-approved HPDs. It translates complex acoustic and psychoacoustic factors and calculations, like insertion loss, speech intelligibility, and sound localization, into clear visuals that help users directly compare HPDs.
Users can toggle inputs for communication needs, mobility, cost, and power requirements to visualize trade-offs and optimize HPD selection for their preferences.
Expanding applications and future updates...While HPOT was initially developed to support military hearing protection decisions, Cozza sees its utility as reaching far beyond that.
"Whether you're a hearing conservationist protecting workers, an audiologist trying to stay current with new technologies, or just someone choosing earplugs for a concert, HPOT was built to help," he said.
The team is currently developing advanced updates for the platform to widen its relevance, including support for impulse noise environments and integrating double hearing protection.
"HPOT is a blueprint for modernizing how personal protective equipment is selected," Cozza said. "We envision a future where intuitive, data-driven tools exist across all categories. Our goal is to simplify those processes using the same science-to-software approach that powers HPOT."
Provided by Acoustical Society of America








