Dictionary Definition
earpiece n : electro-acoustic transducer for
converting electric signals into sounds; it is held over or
inserted into the ear; "it was not the typing but the earphones
that she disliked" [syn: earphone, headphone, phone]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
ear + pieceNoun
- A speaker placed
inside or held near to the ear.
- Holding the earpiece to my ear, I could hear him speaking clearly.
- The arm on a pair of
glasses that hooks over the ear to hold them in place.
- ''My glasses won't stay on, as I've broken the left earpiece.
External links
Extensive Definition
Headphones (also known as earphones, earbuds,
stereophones, headsets, or by the slang term cans or face plugs)
are a pair of small loudspeakers, or less
commonly a single speaker, with a way of holding them close to a
user's ears and a means of
connecting them to a stereophonic, monophonic or
binaural audio-frequency
signal source such as an audio amplifier, radio or CD player. In
the context of telecommunication,
the term headset
is used to describe a combination of headphone and microphone used for two-way
communication, for example with a telephone.
History
The telephone earpiece such as the one pictured
at the right was common around the turn of the 20th century. From
the earpiece developed the headphones. Sensitive headphones were
the only way to listen to audio signals before amplifiers were
developed.
Very sensitive headphones such as those
manufactured by Brandes around 1919 were commonly used for early
radio work. These early headphones used moving
iron drivers, either single ended or balanced armature. The
requirement for high sensitivity meant no damping was used, thus
the sound quality was crude. They also had very poor comfort
compared to modern types, usually having no padding and too often
having excessive clamping force to the head. Impedance varied, but
1,000 to 2,000 ohms was common, which suited both triodes and
crystal sets.
When used with early powered radios, the
headphone was normally connected to the positive high voltage
battery terminal, and the other battery terminal was securely
earthed. The use of bare electrical connections meant some users
could be shocked if they touched the bare headphone connections
while adjusting an uncomfortable headset.
At the time, pre-war headphones were called
telephones, or sometimes phones, rather than headphones.
Applications
Headphones can be used both with fixed equipment such as CD or DVD players, home theater, personal computers and with portable devices (e.g. digital audio player/mp3 player, mobile phone, etc.). Some cordless headphones do not need to be connected via a wire, receiving a radio or infrared signal encoded using a radio or infrared transmission link, like FM, Bluetooth or Wi-Fi. These are actually made of powered receiver systems of which the headphone is only a component.Headphones are widely used for listening to audio
sources for recreation. In the professional
audio sector headphones are used in live situations by disc jockeys
with a DJ
mixer and sound
engineers for monitoring signal sources. In radio studios,
DJs use a pair
of headphones when talking to the microphone while the speakers are
turned off, to eliminate acoustic
feedback and monitor their own voice. In studio recordings,
musicians and singers use headphones to play along to a backing
track. In the military, audio signals of many varieties are
monitored using headphones.
Wired headphones are attached to an audio source.
The most common connectors are 1/4" and 3.5 mm stereophonic jack plugs and
sockets. The older 1/4"
standard is used on professional equipment, and is often used on
fixed equipment. Sony introduced the
smaller, cheaper, and now widely-used, 3.5 mm "mini" stereo
connector in 1979, adapting the older monophonic 3.5 mm
connector for use with its Walkman portable
stereo tape player. Adapters are available for converting between
1/4" and 3.5 mm devices.
Headsets
Headphones that include a microphone are more commonly known as Headsets, and are more often targeted for communication than recreational listening. Communication headsets include mainly three types, wired telephone, computer and mobile telephone. Telephone headsets are usually connected to a fixed-line (PSTN) telephone terminal, replacing its handset, so users can talk on the phone while they work on other things. Telephone headsets are very commonly used in Call Centers and offices, but are sometimes used at home. Computer Headsets come in two types, standard 3.5mm plugs for connecting to sound-card of a PC, or USB connection. Both types are very commonly used for VoIP communication, but USB headsets tend to have better sound quality. Gamers might choose to use a headset in order to both hear the game sounds and talk to their fellow gamers. Computer users who employ speech recognition software often use a headset. Mobile phone headsets come in two types, wired and wireless. Wired mobile phone headsets are sometimes called as "Mobile Handsfree", and are basically a pair of earphones with a microphone module connected to the cable. Wireless mobile handsfree also comes in different types, and the most common type nowadays is the Bluetooth headset that rides on the ear. Wireless and wired intercom units used by the coaching staff of professional sports and for broadcast control and event management often employ a headset attachment.Types of Headphones
There are many different types of headphone designs, with the listening situation and the needs of the listener determining what type of headphone will be used. Generally, headphone formfactors can be divided into four separate categories: Circumaural, supra-aural, earbud, and in-ear. Circumaural headphones have circular or ellipsoid earpads that fit around the ears. This type of headphone is commonly used in recording studios and among audio enthusiasts.Electrostatic
Electrostatic drivers consist of a thin, electrically charged diaphragm, typically a coated PET film membrane, suspended between two perforated metal plates (electrodes). The electrical sound signal is applied to the electrodes creating an electrical field; depending on the polarity of this field, the diaphragm is drawn towards one of the plates. Air is forced through the perforations; combined with a continuously changing electrical signal driving the membrane, a sound wave is generated. Electrostatic headphones are usually more expensive than moving-coil ones, and are comparatively uncommon. In addition, a special amplifier is required to amplify the signal to deflect the membrane, which often requires electrical potentials in the range of 100 to 1000 volts.Due to the extremely thin and light diaphragm
membrane, often only a few micrometers thick, and the complete
absence of moving metalwork, the frequency response of
electrostatic headphones usually extends well above the audible
limit of approximately 20kHz. The high frequency response means
that the low midband distortion level is maintained to the top of
the audible frequency band, which is generally not the case with
moving coil drivers. Also, the frequency response peakiness
regularly seen in the high frequency region with moving coil
drivers is absent. The result is significantly better sound
quality, if designed properly. The listener impression with
electrostatics is one of great clarity.
Electrostatic headphones are powered by anything
from 100v to over 1kV, and are in proximity to a user's head. The
usual method of making this safe is to limit the possible fault
current to a low and safe value with resistors.
Electret
An electret driver functions along the same
electromechanical means as an electrostatic driver. However the
electret driver has a permanent charge built into it, whereas
electrostatics have the charge applied to the driver by an external
generator. Electret headphones, like electrostatics are relatively
uncommon. They are also typically cheaper and lower in technical
capability and fidelity than electrostatics.
Balanced Armature
A balanced armature is a sound transducer design
primarily intended to increase the electrical efficiency of the
element by eliminating the stress on the diaphragm characteristic
of many other magnetic transducer systems. As shown schematically
in the first diagram, it consists of a moving magnetic armature
that is pivoted so it can move in the field of the permanent
magnet. When precisely centered in the magnetic field there is no
net force on the armature, hence the term 'balanced.' As
illustrated in the second diagram, when there is electric
current through the coil, it magnetizes
the armature one way or the other, causing it to rotate slightly
one way or the other about the pivot thus moving the diaphragm
to make sound.
The design is not mechanically stable; a slight
imbalance makes the armature stick to one pole of the magnet. A
fairly stiff restoring force is required to hold the armature in
the ‘balance’ position. Although this reduces its efficiency, this
design can still produce more sound from less power than any other.
Popularized in the 1920s as Baldwin Mica Diaphragm radio
headphones, balanced armature transducers were refined during World
War II for use in 'sound-powered'
telephones for military use. Some of these achieved astonishing
electro-acoustic conversion efficiencies in the 20% to 40% for
narrow bandwidth voice signals.
Today they are typically used only in canalphones
and hearing aids due to their diminutive size and low impedance.
They generally are limited at the extremes of the hearing spectrum
(16kHz) and require a seal more than other types of drivers to
deliver their full potential. Higher end models may employ multiple
armature drivers, dividing the frequency ranges between them using
a passive crossover network. Some combine an armature driver with a
small moving-coil driver for increased bass output.
Orthodynamic
Orthodynamic, or magnetostatic drivers, are either composed of a thinly pressed disc made of tightly coiled fine aluminium wire affixed to a mylar sheet or of a printed circuit. This disc is the diaphragm. The diaphragm is then sandwiched between two magnets which have the same polarity facing each other. As a result the magnets repel from each other and so the whole assembly is clamped together. An electrical signal is passed through the disc as it would be through the voice coil of a moving coil driver and the motion produced generates the sound. Once a popular choice for manufacturers such as Yamaha for their headphones, the technology has fallen generally into disuse as companies increasingly favour moving-coil designs. Fostex though, continues to manufacture orthodynamic headphones.AMT/Piezo/Plasma
AMTs and Piezoelectric drivers are very uncommonly used (when compared to those above) diaphragm technologies, however both have been utilised as headphone drivers in the past. Current production models utilising the technologies total only one for each, although the TakeT piezoelectric headphone is technically a piezoelectric-AMT hybrid design because of the shape of its diaphragm. There has also been one attempt to market a plasma-ionisation drive headphone.Benefits and limitations
Headphones may be used to prevent other people from hearing the sound either for privacy or to prevent disturbance, as in listening in a public library. They can also potentially provide a level of sound quality greater than loudspeakers of similar cost. Part of their ability to do so comes from the lack of any need to perform room correction treatments with headphones. High quality headphones can have an extremely flat low-frequency response down to 20 Hz within 3dB. Rated frequency response distortion figures do not though provide information on what character the sound reproduced at that frequency will be. Marketed claims such as 'frequency response 4 Hz to 20 kHz' are usually overstatements; the product's response at frequencies lower than 20 Hz is typically very small.Headphones are also useful for videogames that use 3D
positional audio processing algorithms, as they allow players to
better judge the position of an off-screen sound source (such as
the footsteps of an opponent).
Although modern headphones have been particularly
widely sold and used for listening to stereo
recordings since the release of the Walkman, there is
subjective debate regarding the nature of their reproduction of
stereo sound. Stereo recordings represent the position of
horizontal depth cues (stereo seperation) via volume differences of
the sound in question between the two channels. When the sounds
from two speakers mix, they create the phase
difference the brain uses to locate direction. Through most
headphones, because the right and left channels do not combine in
this manner, the illusion of the phantom centre can be perceived as
lost. Hard panned sounds will also only be heard only in one ear
rather than from one side. This latter point is of particular
import for earlier stereo recordings which were less sophisticated,
sometimes playing vocals through one channel and music through the
other.
Binaural
recordings use a different microphone technique to encode
direction directly as phase, with very little amplitude difference
(except above 2 kHz) often using a dummy
head, and can produce a surprisingly life-like spatial
impression through headphones. Commercial recordings almost always
use stereo recording, because historically loudspeaker listening
has been more popular than headphone listening. It is possible to
change the spatial effects of stereo sound on headphones to better
approximate the presentation of speaker reproduction by using
frequency-dependent cross-feed between the channels,
or—better still—a Blumlein shuffler (a custom
EQ employed to augment the low-frequency content of the difference
information in a stereo signal). While cross-feed can reduce the
unpleasantness that some listeners find with hard panned stereo in
headphones, the use of a dummy
head during recording, with artificial pinnae,
can allow on playback through headphones, the experience of hearing
the performance as though situated in the positron of the dummy
head. Optimal sound is achieved when the dummy head matches the
listener's head, since pinnae vary greatly in size and shape.
Headsets can have an ergonomic benefits over
traditional telephone handsets. They allow call center
agents to maintain better posture
instead of tilting their head sideways to cradle a handset.
Over time, headphone cables may fail. The common
scenario in which a replacement might need to be purchased is the
physical breakdown of copper wiring at junction points on the cord
(at the TRS jack, or at the point of connection to the headphone).
These are the sites of greatest and most stressful motion on a cord
and so they are typically fitted with some kind of strain
relief.
Dangers and volume solutions
Using headphones at a sufficiently high volume level can cause temporary or permanent hearing impairment or deafness due to an effect called "masking." The headphone volume has to compete with the background noise, especially in excessively loud places such as subway stations, airplanes, and large crowds. This leads to the disappearance of the normal pain associated with higher levels of volumes. Extended periods of the excessively loud volume may be damaging http://www.asha.org/public/hearing/disorders/causes_adults.htm http://www.nidcd.nih.gov/health/hearing/noise.asp; however, one hearing expert found that "fewer than 5% of users select volume levels and listen frequently enough to risk hearing loss. http://www.audiologyonline.com/articles/article_detail.asp?article_id=221." Some manufacturers of portable music devices have attempted to introduce safety circuitry that limited output volume or warned the user when dangerous volume was being used, but the concept has been rejected by most of the buying public, which favors the personal choice of high volume. Koss introduced the "Safelite" line of cassette players in 1983 with such a warning light. The line was discontinued two years later for lack of interest.The French government
has imposed a limit on all music players sold in the country: they
must not be capable of producing more than 100dBA (the threshold of
hearing damage during extended listening is 80dB, and the threshold
of pain, or theoretically of immediate hearing loss, is 130dB).
Many users decry this as an infringement on personal choice, and
use third-party options to reverse the software volume caps placed
on such devices. Still, other users welcome the government's
pro-health stance.
Other risks arise from the reduced awareness of
external sounds—some jurisdictions regulate the
use of headphones while driving vehicles, usually
limiting the use of earphones to a single ear. The complete
isolation from outside noise can be a hazard in itself, as a user
could miss the sound of a car horn and walk into traffic with fatal
consequences. Losing situational awareness can also lead to getting
robbed, particularly in busy environments where bumping into
another person would be ignored, e.g., subway stations.
Canalphones
are generally believed to be safer than open-air headphones for use
in noisy environments. The reason for this is that much of the
external noise which is usually heard while using earphones or
headphones is blocked out by canalphones, therefore allowing the
user to listen at lower volume levels without having to turn up the
listening device to compete with background noise. Canalphones are
a passive counterpart to active noise canceling headphones, which
use circuitry and destructive wave
interference to attenuate sound. Manufacturers of canalphones
quote that their products reach isolation levels of -30dB to -40dB,
while noise cancellers isolate by a degree of -15dB to -20dB.
Closed
and noise-cancelling
headphones can have a similar effect, although sound
attenuation of the latter is usually limited in frequency range and
amplitude: closed headphones do not isolate low frequency sounds
very well, and noise cancellers do not attempt to attenuate high
frequency sounds.
See also
References
External links
earpiece in Czech: Sluchátka
earpiece in Danish: Hovedtelefoner
earpiece in German: Kopfhörer
earpiece in Spanish: Auriculares
earpiece in Esperanto: Kapaŭskultiloj
earpiece in French: Casque audio
earpiece in Korean: 이어폰
earpiece in Indonesian: Earphone
earpiece in Italian: Auricolari
earpiece in Hebrew: אוזניות
earpiece in Dutch: Hoofdtelefoon
earpiece in Japanese: ヘッドフォン
earpiece in Norwegian: Hodetelefoner
earpiece in Norwegian Nynorsk:
Hovudtelefon
earpiece in Polish: Słuchawki
earpiece in Portuguese: Auscultadores
earpiece in Russian: Наушники
earpiece in Finnish: Kuuloke
earpiece in Swedish: Hörlurar
earpiece in Ukrainian: Навушники
earpiece in Chinese: 耳機