Technology

Samsung Launches Hearapy App to Cure Motion Sickness

South Korea: Samsung recently launched a new Android app called Hearapy that aims to reduce motion sickness, a problem many people experience while travelling. The app is now available for download on the Google Play Store. 

Instead of using medicines, Hearapy uses sound to ease symptoms like nausea and dizziness. Samsung says the app is designed to help users feel more balanced and comfortable during travel. 

The app works by playing a low 100Hz bass tone through connected headphones or earbuds. This sound is meant to stimulate the body’s balance system and reduce the discomfort caused by movement. 

According to Samsung, users need to listen to this tone for about 60 seconds before or during travel. A single session is said to provide relief from motion sickness for up to 2 hours. 

Users can adjust the listening time between 40 and 120 seconds on the basis of how they feel. They can also repeat the session if symptoms return during a long journey. 

The sound used by Hearapy targets the vestibular system, which is located in the inner ear. This system helps control balance and movement, and when it gets confused, motion sickness can occur.  

Samsung says the idea behind the app is supported by research from Nagoya University in Japan. The study found that certain sound frequencies helped reduce discomfort in people travelling in moving vehicles.  

The app is designed to work best with Samsung Galaxy Buds 4 Pro, which are tuned to deliver the low‑frequency sound more accurately. However, the tech giant notes that Hearapy can also be used with other headphones.  

Samsung highlights that motion sickness affects a large number of people and can make everyday travel uncomfortable. It thus sees Hearapy as a plausible cure for regular commuters and travellers. 

The company, however, also says the app is not a guaranteed cure. Its effect may vary from person to person, depending on individual sensitivity and the quality of the headphones used. 

The company believes Hearapy would serve as a crucial step in its push towards health‑focused technology. It shows how everyday devices like smartphones and earbuds can be used to solve common issues humans face on the daily.  

With Hearapy now available on Android, Samsung is giving its users a new way to manage motion sickness. The app may be especially helpful for people who travel frequently by car, bus, train, or plane. 

Yashika Aneja

Yashika Aneja is a journalist at Tea4Tech with over five years of experience in reporting and editorial writing. Her work spans technology, environment, education, politics, social media, travel, and lifestyle, with a focus on fact-based reporting and explanatory storytelling. || At Tea4Tech, Yashika contributes original reporting and analysis that adheres to the publication’s editorial standards for accuracy, originality, and responsible journalism. Her reporting is informed by curiosity-driven research and a multidisciplinary approach to news coverage.

Recent Posts

Companies Are Giving More Than Just Money to AI, Microsoft CEO Warns

New York: Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella has put out a blunt warning that most businesses…

2 days ago

Meta Pulls Back Image Feature From Instagram, Here’s Why!

California: Meta has shut down a controversial AI image feature on Instagram just three days…

2 days ago

OpenAI Rolls Out GPT-5.6 in Three Tiers, Takes Direct Aim at Anthropic

New Delhi: OpenAI has moved its GPT-5.6 model family out of limited preview and into…

6 days ago

China’s New Brain Chip Leaves Nvidia’s A100 Far Behind in Neural Modelling

Beijing: A team of scientists in China has built a chip that can reconstruct the…

1 week ago

SK Hynix Bets Big on AI with $28 Billion Nasdaq Listing

South Korean chipmaker SK Hynix has launched one of the largest share sales in the…

1 week ago

Apple Creator Studio Just Got a Major AI Upgrade! Here’s What’s New

New Delhi: Apple has rolled out its largest update to Apple Creator Studio since the…

2 weeks ago