the silence is making me deaf haha
wla bang pwedeng makausap dyan?
hqhqhqhq
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the silence is making me deaf haha
wla bang pwedeng makausap dyan?
hqhqhqhq
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Answer:
Walay Dun kapo mag hanap SA crush app madami Kang makakausap
Explanation:
Ihopeithelps
Explanation:
Big Question: Why Can Silence Make You Hear Things That Aren't There?
Sometimes all it takes to trigger your own hallucinatory symphony is a prolonged silence.
Ear With Blood Vessels
You've probably never encountered real silence. Finding a place that remains sonically unmolested by the roar of commercial jets or the steady hum of highways is nearly impossible. Whether you live in a city, the suburbs, or on a ranch in Montana, sound in the modern world is more or less inescapable.
Turns out, that's a good thing. Because when confronted with absolute or even near silence, human brains and ears react in some pretty weird ways—ways that can result in a wide range of bizarre sonic experiences. And their inner workings may even explain the auditory hallucinations associated with certain forms of psychosis.
The Search for Silence
“Sound is such a constant thing, we don’t even think about it” says Eric Heller, author of Why You Hear What You Hear. “Even a quiet house is 40 dBA (A-weighted decibels).” For context, zero dBA is considered the point at which humans can start to detect sound. A soft whisper at three feet is about 30 dBA. And a busy freeway at 50 feet is 80 dBA.
Now compare that with something like the -9 decibels of Orfield Lab's anechoic chamber in Minneapolis, the quietest place on Earth according to Guinness, and you begin to see the stark sonic difference between the natural world we live in and the one contained within these artificial 3-D sound sponges.
Anechoic chambers are quiet by design, and are typically used to test things like audio equipment and aircraft fuselages. They're able to squash reverberation (echoes) and keep external sounds out through a combination of architecture and special materials. Most are rooms within rooms, lined on all six sides with soundproof fiberglass wedges to kill sound reflections. (You're usually standing on a suspended mesh wire platform while inside.)
Yet even after all that effort to block external sound and thwart internal reflections, silence is surprisingly hard to come by in an anechoic chamber. In fact, people have a habit of discovering new sounds both real and fake in these disorienting environments.
The Sounds of Silence
The real stuff is usually what people notice first. Starved for input, our ears and brain essentially go into overdrive. Sounds that are typically drowned out in the din of modern life become, in some cases, unbearably loud. Spontaneous firings of the auditory nerve can cause a high-pitched hiss, for example. Many people also have the strange experience of hearing their own blood pumping to their head, their breath, their heartbeat, as well as their digestive system's symphony of gurgles and blurps. If you're among the 5 to 15 percent of the population with constant tinnitus (ear ringing), you'll definitely notice that, too.
And that's where it ends for a lot of people. For others—like Radiolab co-host Jad Abumrad, who decided to sit in a completely dark anechoic chamber for an hour---things can get weirder.