I noticed a change in volume over the past week or few. Honestly, my Minis have been behaving poorly since mid December it's hard to track. In any case, I used to listen at 25% max most of the time. Now I can barely hear music at the same level. I've also noticed that my ocean sleep sounds sometimes are still playing up to my alarm going off in the morning, where the waves used to stop after about an hour.

Fwiw, I believe you can command (voice or routine) speakers to play white noise for X period of time - "Hey Google, play white noise for 12 hours.". Though this may be broken as of late and/or change from day to day as other functions have recently.


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Katie Kleiger (she/hers) is a New York-based actor and musician who last appeared at Studio Theatre in The Wolves and The Effect. Additional theatre credits include Ring Twice for Miranda at New York City Center, The Fall at SoHo Playhouse, Pride and Prejudice at Repertory Theatre of St. Louis, Everything is Wonderful at Philadelphia Theatre Company, The Book of Will and Miss Bennet: Christmas at Pemberley at Round House Theatre, and Juno and The Paycock and Blue Stockings at the Guthrie Theatre. Katie is also a company member at Everyman Theatre, where her credits include Proof, Steel Magnolias, and The Importance of Being Earnest. You can listen to her music on Spotify, Apple Music, and all other listening platforms. katiekleiger.com. On social media at @katiekleiger (Instagram).

Adrien-Alice Hansel (she/her) is the Literary Director at Studio, where she has dramaturged the world premieres of I Hate it Here, Queen of Basel, The Remains, No Sisters, I Wanna Fucking Tear You Apart, Animal, Red Speedo, Dirt, Lungs, and The History of Kisses, as well as productions of Tender Age, Flow, Until the Flood, 2.5 Minute Ride, Cry It Out, Translations, Curve of Departure, The Effect, Wig Out!, Straight White Men, Cloud 9, Hedda Gabler, Constellations, Jumpers for Goalposts, Bad Jews (twice), The Apple Family Plays, Invisible Man, Sucker Punch, The Golden Dragon, and The New Electric Ballroom, among others. Prior to joining Studio, she spent eight seasons at the Actors Theatre of Louisville, where she headed the literary department and coordinated project scouting, selection, and development for the Humana Festival of New American Plays. She is the co-editor of eight anthologies of plays from Actors Theatre and editor of 10 editions of plays through Studio. Adrien-Alice holds an MFA from the Yale School of Drama.

Not without a tone. But try to turn up the operator feedback all the way and have a high amount of FM and play around with the ratios a bit. That will create different colours of noise. And then you can shape it with the filter bit.

For the hell of it I made a different white noise patch. A bit thicker flavor of noise and (dare I say?) a little less noticeable tone. W NOISE.dnsnd (568 Bytes) . The detune parameters I found to not do much in this patch, whether it is 127 or 0.

I made a board with the TPA3110D2, and it presents a high level of constant white noise hiss. If I short the input to GND, the noise disappears, but I'm not sure what to do to reduce the noise level. I've tried the board connecting it to a motherboard, and supplying it power from the same source. If the power comes from a different adapter than the motherboard, the noise is significantly reduced. The gain is set to 20dB

I also tried a board with the same IC that I bought on Ebay to compare its performance, and the noise level is quite lower, even if powered by the same source as the motherboard. This board had the power limiter set at half the VGDD, but I tried removing the power limit (connecting PLIMIT to GVDD) and the noise level is still lower than that of my board.

I've captured the signals at VCC, AVCC and the input signal. The input noise is a lot higher when I supply the audio board with the same supply as the motherboard, but what I don't understand is why the eBay board does not have the same high noise under the same power/signal input circumstances.

I understand the problem is noise getting to the audio input, but I'm mostly concerned about the PCB design because I've tried other boards that, when supplied from the same means, do not present such high noise. So I was mostly looking for suggestions as to how to improve the routing / component placement on the PCB.

From what I've been reading, I think I should set the PVCC traces in a star connection, and distance those traces from the input part of the IC (the noise in the input seems related to the 300kHz APA switching frequency). Also place smaller capacitors and closer to the amplifier.

I only think there might be something wrong with my design because, when trying other boards with the same APA, the noise is much lower. If that wasn't the case I would just accept that the issue only lies in the power source / audio input line, but it seems like the design could be improved to lower the noise level.

For more ways to find peace and quiet, see our guides to the best earplugs for sleeping, the best noise-cancelling headphones, and the best sleep headphones. We also have guidance on using a white noise machine for a baby.

To learn what features to look for in white noise machines, we spoke with Michael Perlis, PhD, director of the behavioral sleep medicine program at the University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine whose work includes studying the use of white noise machines in treating insomnia. We also interviewed UPenn scientist Mathias Basner, MD, PhD, a professor of sleep and chronobiology in the department of psychiatry who co-authored a clinical review of studies on the use of white noise as a sleep aid, as well as Stanford University sleep researcher Rafael Pelayo, MD, author of How to Sleep: The New Science-Based Solutions for Sleeping Through the Night and a medical consultant to Adaptive Sound Technologies Inc. (ASTI), the maker of two of our picks, the LectroFan EVO and the Sound+Sleep. To understand how noises mask each other, we spent hours talking on the phone and emailing with Stphane Pigeon, PhD, a sound engineer specializing in white noise and the creator of myNoise, our favorite white noise app.

We first tested white noise machines in 2016. After considering nine devices, supervising editor Courtney Schley zeroed in on six for further evaluation, including three white noise machines made by Yogasleep (formerly Marpac): the Dohm Classic (then called the Dohm DS), the Rohm, and the Hushh. She also tested the ASTI LectroFan Classic, the HoMedics Deep Sleep II, and the Sleep Easy Sound Conditioner.

As is expected with white noise machines that generate sounds from a single physical fan, the Dohm is more limited in its masking capabilities compared with its digital counterparts. While it masked softer noises like the freeway traffic as well as the LectroFan EVO when behind a closed door, sounds such as barking dogs or talking people required higher volume just to blur the noise, let alone completely mask it.

Despite costing $10 less than the Dohm, the Yogasleep Whish seemed like it would be a logical upgrade. It offers a wide range of sounds, including six fans, two white noise options, and eight nature noises. Each is clearly marked and easy to access with the press of a button. However, the response is delayed and the buttons are crowded, making it a challenge to find what you need in the dark. The noises also sound harsh and synthetic, particularly compared with the Dohm.

Background:  Infantile colic (IC) is one of the most common reasons for doctor visits among babies younger than 3 months. One of five babies older than 3 months also experiences IC. IC, unlike gastrointestinal problems, is regarded as an individual differentiation and maturation of the central nervous system. Providing a warm bath, breastfeeding, swinging and playing of white noise are nonpharmacological methods. The efficiency of these methods has been proven by various studies independently of one another.

Methods:  The study was conducted between April-December 2016. The study sample consisted of 40 1-month-old babies with gas pains who passed a hearing screening and their mothers. The total daily crying and sleeping durations of the babies were determined without any intervention on the first week. On the second week, 20 randomly selected babies (first group) were swung each time they cried, and on the third week, they were made to listen to white noise. The other 20 babies (second group) were made to listen to white noise on the second week and were swung on the third week. Swinging and playing of white noise were performed until the babies stopped crying. After every intervention, the total crying and sleeping durations of the babies were evaluated using a "Colicky Baby's Diary."

Results:  Playing of white noise significantly decreased the daily crying durations (p < .05) and increased the sleeping durations of the colicky babies (p < .05) compared to swinging in both groups.

Given that noise and its influence on neural processing is not limited to sensory signals but rather permeates every level of the nervous system (Faisal et al., 2008), stochastic facilitation should likewise be relevant for the implementation of higher cognitive functions. Indeed, computational modeling and cellular recordings of hippocampal sub-regions demonstrated the exploitation of noise in signal detection in hippocampal networks, indicating broad implications for memory formation and retrieval (Stacey and Durand, 2000; Yoshida et al., 2002).

Interestingly, experimental studies could also provide evidence for a modulation of higher cognitive functions through stimulation with external noise sources. For instance, noisy galvanic vestibular stimulation presented during recall of visual features of faces enhanced recall for these features (Wilkinson et al., 2008) and transcranial random noise stimulation over the motor cortex facilitated implicit motor learning (Terney et al., 2008). Acoustic noise has been shown to reduce errors in a delayed response task compared to music presentation and silence in monkeys (Carlson et al., 1997) and to affect the speed of arithmetical calculations in humans in an inverted-U shaped manner depending on loudness with reaction times (RTs) being shortest at an intermediate level of 77 dB (Usher and Feingold, 2000). ff782bc1db

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