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Funny you should say that, as I was just studying for a psychiatry exam, and finished reading a few chapters on human memory and attention.
The 'frame buffer' for raw sensory input is OOMs larger than what's brought to your conscious attention. If you're sitting on a chair, mechanoreceptors are constantly sending signals upstream, but only salient information, presumably the text you're reading right now, is magnified and focused.
I strongly expect that additional senses will, while distracting initially, fade into the background until salient, no more of a nuisance than your proprioception of your legs interferes with your ability to read.
That is the key difference between a mature BCI and most other prosthetics. If you use neural connections, you avoid the issue of having to compress or wrest control of existing sensory bandwidth. You shouldn't settle for ultrasound pitched down to be audible, you should be able to hear both. I strongly expect that in actual usage, bandwidth won't be an issue, or have negligible impacts.
And of course, if you don't see the utility in something, don't install it into your body. I have nothing against people who are happy with their existing bodies and minds, I just desire otherwise for myself.
Ultimately, it's good to have early-adopters like yourself around. You are the willing guinea-pigs for the rest of us. So I will gladly root for your success from the sidelines of techno-cyborg progress. If it gets me a spider-chair instead of a wheel-chair by the time I need one, I'll be happy.
Years back, I had corrective laser eye surgery. It was great to not muck about with glasses (old clunky technology) or soft contact lenses (newer, more streamline technology). But I also found all this sharp focus quite distracting, especially during that first month when my long-distance vision was better than normal. Like, when driving, my attention would get drawn and fixed to those five-paragraph-essay parking rule signs ("parking permitted during A, B, C, except at X, Y, Z"). I had to re-train my brain to de-prioritize written signs. And yes, as you point out, eventually those signs indeed stopped drawing my attention, fading into the background.
But as a counter-example, my husband gets ear-worms. He goes into a store, and comes out with some inane pop song playing in a loop in his head for the next three days. Attention isn't as aligned to our needs as we'd like it to be.
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