OT-based explanation of Auditory Sensitivity, with signs, reasons, and practical therapy strategies used for autistic children.
What is Auditory Sensitivity?
Auditory sensitivity means the child’s brain reacts too strongly to sounds that others find normal.
The problem is not the ears — it is how the brain processes sound.
This is very common in autism.
Common Signs of Auditory Sensitivity
A child may:
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Cover ears frequently
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Cry or panic with loud sounds
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Fear appliances (mixer, vacuum, hand dryer)
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Get overwhelmed in crowds
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React strongly to sudden noises
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Lose focus when there is background noise
These reactions are real sensory distress, not misbehavior.
Why It Happens (OT Perspective)
The nervous system:
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cannot filter sounds properly
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treats normal sounds as “danger”
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triggers fight-or-flight response
This leads to anxiety, meltdowns, or shutdowns.
OT Goals for Auditory Sensitivity
OT aims to:
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help the brain tolerate sound gradually
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reduce fear response
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improve sound filtering
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teach coping strategies
OT Strategies & Activities
1. Environmental Sound Control (First Step)
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Reduce background noise when possible
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Turn off TV during tasks
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Use soft-close doors
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Choose quiet spaces for learning
This reduces overload while therapy begins.
2. Noise-Reducing Headphones (Support Tool)
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Use during crowds, travel, school assemblies
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Not full isolation — just sound dampening
⚠️ Do not use all the time (avoid sound dependence).
3. Proprioceptive & Deep Pressure Input (Very Important)
Deep pressure helps calm the nervous system, making sounds more tolerable.
Examples:
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Wall push-ups
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Weighted lap pad
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Firm hugs
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Carrying heavy objects
Use before exposure to noisy environments.
4. Gradual Sound Exposure (Desensitization)
Done slowly and gently.
Example progression:
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Low-volume sound (child controls volume)
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Short exposure (10–20 seconds)
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Pair with calming activity
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Increase duration over weeks
Never force exposure.
5. Sound Pairing with Positive Activities
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Soft music during favorite play
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Household sounds paired with rewards
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Singing while vacuum is on (at distance)
Goal: change emotional response to sound.
6. Auditory Discrimination Games
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Matching animal sounds
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Guessing sounds with eyes closed
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Rhythm clapping
Improves sound processing and tolerance.
7. Predictability & Warning
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Tell child before loud sounds
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Use visual cards: “LOUD SOUND COMING”
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Countdown before noise
Predictability reduces panic.
What NOT to Do
❌ Forcing exposure
❌ Saying “it’s not loud”
❌ Sudden surprise sounds
❌ Removing coping tools suddenly
These increase fear and sensitivity.
Example OT Routine Before Noisy Activity
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Wall push-ups (1 min)
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Deep pressure hug (1 min)
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Headphones ready
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Short sound exposure
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Calm break afterward
Signs of Improvement
✔ less ear covering
✔ quicker recovery after noise
✔ better tolerance in public
✔ reduced anxiety
Progress is gradual, not instant.
Key OT Principle
Calm the body first — sound tolerance follows.
