tonoscope

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English

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Etymology

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From tono- +‎ -scope, coined by Dr. Hans Jenny, who invented the first such device and published research that was based on it.

Noun

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tonoscope (plural tonoscopes)

  1. Any of various devices that make sound visible by displaying vibrations.
    • 2010, Naomi Ozaniec, Beat Stress With Meditation: Teach Yourself, →ISBN:
      When the tonoscope was used with patients suffering from speech difficulties, the difference between a pure sound and a skewed sound was clearly evident.
    • 2014, Brenton J. Malin, Feeling Mediated: A History of Media Technology and Emotion in America, →ISBN:
      Seashore saw the emotions of music as buried in the subsensory rise and fall of the sound wave; only tools such as the tonoscope could capture music's true beauty.
    • 2016, J. Douglas Kenyon, Unseen Forces: A Guide for the Truly Attentive, →ISBN:
      Although a deaf child might not be able to hear the difference between a properly pronounced “oh” and a guttural, poorly articulated “uhh,” using the tonoscope they could see the difference!