Updated
Updated · ScienceAlert · Jun 17
DSGZ Study Ties Global 'The Hum' to Low-Frequency Tinnitus in 28-Volunteer Test
Updated
Updated · ScienceAlert · Jun 17

DSGZ Study Ties Global 'The Hum' to Low-Frequency Tinnitus in 28-Volunteer Test

2 articles · Updated · ScienceAlert · Jun 17

Summary

  • A DSGZ-led study argues many cases of the long-reported global “Hum” may stem from low-frequency tinnitus rather than an external sound source.
  • Tests on 28 volunteers found most did not have unusually strong low-frequency hearing, weakening one leading theory that Hum hearers are simply extra sensitive to bass sounds.
  • Ear-canal measurements also found no unusual otoacoustic emissions, undercutting the idea that inner-ear sounds themselves explain the phenomenon and pointing instead to a subjective auditory perception.
  • The researchers said that would not explain every case, and some measurable external low-frequency sounds may still exist, but the findings shift attention toward the auditory system.
  • For people who hear the Hum, reclassifying some cases as tinnitus could connect them to existing coping tools and treatment research for a condition with no cure yet.

Insights

If 'The Hum' is tinnitus, can new brain-rewiring therapies finally cure this decades-old auditory mystery?
As science labels 'The Hum' an internal noise, are we ignoring the threat of real low-frequency pollution in our environment?