Skip to content
ScienceBlog.com
  • Featured Blogs
    • EU Horizon Blog
    • ESA Tracker
    • Experimental Frontiers
    • Josh Mitteldorf’s Aging Matters
    • Dr. Lu Zhang’s Gondwanaland
    • NeuroEdge
    • NIAAA
    • SciChi
    • The Poetry of Science
    • Wild Science
  • Topics
    • Brain & Behavior
    • Earth, Energy & Environment
    • Health
    • Life & Non-humans
    • Physics & Mathematics
    • Social Sciences
    • Space
    • Technology
  • Our Substack
  • Follow Us!
    • Bluesky
    • Threads
    • FaceBook
    • Google News
    • Twitter/X
  • Contribute/Contact

canceling technology

A University of Washington team has developed an artificial intelligence system that lets a user wearing headphones look at a person speaking for three to five seconds and then hear just the enrolled speaker’s voice in real time even as the listener moves around in noisy places and no longer faces the speaker. Pictured is a prototype of the headphone system: binaural microphones attached to off-the-shelf noise canceling headphones.

AI headphones let wearer listen to a single person in a crowd, by looking at them just once

Substack subscription form sign up

Comments

  • Monte Dale Jr on Cracks Are Appearing in the Geometric Assumption Underlying All of Modern Cosmology
  • Monte Dale Jr on Cracks Are Appearing in the Geometric Assumption Underlying All of Modern Cosmology
  • Not Buying Yer Bullshit on More Than a Third of Americans Have Lost Relationships Over Politics
  • Marco Messina on More Than a Third of Americans Have Lost Relationships Over Politics
  • Anon on Why Fructose Behaves Less Like a Calorie and More Like a Hormone
© 2026 ScienceBlog.com | Follow our RSS / XML feed