By the 1950s,
Lawrence J. Fogel created systems and submitted patents regarding active noise cancellation in the field of
aviation. This system was designed to reduce noise for the pilots in the cockpit area and help make their communication easier and protect hearing. Fogel is considered to be the inventor of active noise cancellation, and he designed one of the first noise-cancelling headphones systems. Later on, Willard Meeker designed an active noise control model that was applied to
circumaural earmuffs for advanced hearing protection. Noise-cancelling aviation
headsets are now commonly available. In 1984, German audio equipment manufacturer
Sennheiser was asked by
Lufthansa Airlines, a German airline company, to develop a pilot headset which could reduce the
hearing loss, stress, and
interference associated with the constant noise of aviation
cockpits. In response, Sennheiser developed its patented NoiseGard technology, a flagship ANC software of its time. In 1987, the Sennheiser LHM-45 headset launched, and was the first ANC headset to obtain U.S. Federal Aviation Association's (FAA)
Technical Standard Orders (TSO) certification to authorize mass-manufacturing for American aviation markets. By 1989, Bose introduced its
Aviation Headset Series I, which is claimed as the first commercially available ANC headset, although dates of commercial availability are disputed between 1986 and 1989. On the first flight to navigate the entire globe without refueling, pilots
Jeana Yeager and
Dick Rutan wore prototype ANC headsets for pilots developed by Bose in 1986. In the 1990s, Bose became the first company to partner with the
United States Army, supplying them with ANC headphones to boost communication and protect the hearing of its pilots. Several airlines provide noise-cancelling headphones in their
business and
first-class cabins. Bose started supplying American Airlines with noise-cancelling headphones in 1999 and started offering the Quiet Comfort line for the general consumer in 2000. Met with an overwhelmingly positive response, Bose would begin selling their headphones directly to consumers. == Sensory protection ==