When you listen to the world around you, you are experiencing air conduction. This is the standard hearing pathway that human beings rely on every single day. It begins when an audio source creates sound waves that travel through the air and enter your ear canal. These invisible waves strike your eardrum, causing it to vibrate. That physical vibration is then passed along a tiny chain of middle ear bones until it reaches a fluid-filled, snail-shaped structure in your inner ear called the cochlea. Finally, the cochlea translates these mechanical vibrations into electrical signals that your brain interprets as sound.
Because it is the natural way humans are designed to hear, air conduction is the underlying mechanism behind regular room speakers, traditional earbuds, and open-ear directional speakers. The screen-free AI assistant smart glasses on the market today predominantly use air-conducted directional audio arrays. These advanced speakers are built into the frames and use phase-cancellation technology to beam sound waves directly through the air into your ear canal, minimizing audio leakage to those around you while keeping your ears completely unplugged.
Bone Conduction takes a completely different path, acting as a structural shortcut to your inner ear. Instead of sending sound waves through the air, Bone Conduction devices use specialized transducers that rest against the mastoid bone just behind the ear. These transducers generate subtle, physical vibrations that travel through your skull bone directly to the cochlea, entirely bypassing the outer ear canal and the middle ear.
Both approaches offer distinct pros and cons depending on your lifestyle. Air conduction generally provides far superior audio fidelity and a much richer, deeper bass response, making it the preferred choice for immersive media and natural-sounding AI voices. On the other hand, Bone Conduction's greatest strength is that it leaves your ear canal completely physically open, preserving maximum Situational Awareness in busy environments. Furthermore, because it bypasses the traditional acoustic pathway, it works incredibly well for people with certain outer or middle ear conditions. Today, many smart glasses use one or the other, and some newer designs may combine both.
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