What Your Noise-Cancelling Headphones Can and Can’t Do


This Amazon commercial bugs the heck out of me. In it, a young boy jumps on a bed, raucously playing an electric guitar while another kid plays drums. Meanwhile, a father relaxes blissfully undisturbed because he’s wearing noise-cancelling headphones. This scene drives me bonkers because, as a headphones expert, I know the truth: That’s not how noise-cancelling headphones work.

It’s a popular misconception that noise-cancelling headphones can block out any sound around you. People purchase them in the hopes of dimming the din of kids at play, loud-talking officemates, the barking dog next door, and airplane engines. The trouble is, active noise cancellation is really effective on only one of those things. (Spoiler: It’s the airplane engine.) The reason has to do with the physics of sound and how noise-cancelling headphones work.

The physics of active noise cancellation

Active noise reduction technology functions primarily by exploiting a principle of physics called phase cancellation. As you probably know, sound travels in waves, moving the air molecules. These waves travel through the air and into your ear canal, where they vibrate your eardrum. However, if a sound wave meets another sound wave that is the exact same in frequency and opposite in amplitude, the two largely negate each other.

Picture the air molecules as a string stretched between two points. If someone were to press down on the string in the direct center, that would disturb the string, causing a ripple. If, as you pressed on the string on one side, someone else were to press on the string from the opposite side at the exact same place with the exact same force, the string would barely move. Although this visual doesn’t precisely communicate how sound waves work, it helps you to picture how a wave, when matched with its opposite in phase, is effectively cancelled out.

Active-noise-cancelling headphones use tiny microphones on the inside (and sometimes the outside) of the earcups to process the sound headed toward your ears and immediately play the opposite phase of that sound through the headphone drivers. The opposing forces effectively reduce the air-molecule movement, and you get a reduction in perceptible sound. Again, this description is a simplification, but it’s the basic concept that all ANC headphone designs currently go by.

Animation: Wirecutter

Generally speaking, this type of active noise cancellation is most effective on lower frequencies of sound, between 50 Hz and 1 kHz. (If you’re curious about what 1 kHz sounds like, watch this video.) This is partly because lower frequencies produce longer waveforms that are easier to line up properly. Also, at higher frequencies, if the waveforms don’t line up just right, you’re more likely to encounter feedback. So most active-noise-cancelling headphones have a noticeable dip in usefulness right at the 1 kHz point.

This is why ANC is better suited for reducing low, sustained sounds like those of motors and airplane engines, and it’s why such headphones can’t filter out screaming kids. (We’ve talked with researchers who say there are ANC concepts in the works that would do a better job with higher frequencies, but that technology is likely still a few years away.)

What type of headphone should you buy?

For frequent flyers or folks who want to ignore an annoying air conditioner hum, active-noise-cancelling headphones are a great option. But what if you want to block out human voices or barking dogs? Well, that’s where passive isolation comes in. Passive isolation is a physical barrier between your ears and the sounds you don’t want to hear. Many of the best—and, usually, the most expensive—noise-cancelling headphones are equipped with earcups and earpads designed to block as much mid- and high-frequency noise as possible while remaining comfortable. So you get the best of both worlds: active and passive noise reduction.

However, if you’re looking to block out only human voices and other higher-frequency sounds, a pair of less expensive, passive headphones might serve you just as well. Nearly all closed-back, over-ear headphones—especially those designed for recording—do a solid job of attenuating the sounds of kids playing, workmates chatting, and dogs barking.





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