Glossary of hearing aid terminology, cont’d Word, Acronym Definition RIC Receiver‐in‐the‐Canal hearing aids look similar to open BTEs, but instead of resting behind the ear, the receiver is placed in the canal. The body of the hearing aid remains on top of and slightly behind the ear, but the receiver (speaker) portion of the device is moved from the primary casing to inside the ear canal – hence, receiver‐in‐the‐canal. Two primary benefits: 1) it makes the body of the device much small and lighter, 2) the sound quality at the eardrum is a clearer representation of the actual sound. RIC hearing aids have become the most popular hearing aid on the market today. RITE Receiver‐in‐the‐Ear hearing aids transmit sound to a receiver that sits just outside your ear on the concha – the hollow next to your ear canal. Whereas RICs’ receiver is in the ear canal. And, RITE’s offer a smaller housing than BTEs. 23