Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Scientists studying ‘paranormal’ occurrences reveal unsettling details about the sounds we cannot hear

Scientists believe the findings could reshape how paranormal experiences are understood

infrasound paranormal study

The findings have renewed scientific interest in reports of paranormal activity

iStock

Highlights

  • Researchers say low-frequency infrasound may explain why some locations feel “haunted”
  • A new study found exposure to the sound increased stress levels in participants
  • Volunteers could not hear the frequency but still showed physical stress responses
  • Scientists believe the findings could reshape how paranormal experiences are understood

The science behind a feeling many people struggle to explain

People visiting allegedly haunted locations often describe a similar experience. They feel uneasy, unsettled and deeply uncomfortable, even when there appears to be no obvious reason why. For years, these reactions have fuelled stories about ghosts, spirits and supernatural activity. Scientists are now offering a very different explanation, and it begins with a sound humans cannot even hear.

A new study published in Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience suggests that infrasound, which refers to acoustic frequencies below 20 hertz, may be responsible for triggering feelings often associated with paranormal encounters. Although the human ear cannot detect these frequencies, researchers found that the body may still respond to them in significant ways.


What researchers discovered in the experiment

To better understand the link, researchers recruited 36 undergraduate psychology students from MacEwan University and monitored how they reacted to hidden exposure to infrasound.

Participants were placed alone in a room where they listened to both calming and unsettling music. Some sessions included an 18-hertz infrasound frequency, while others did not. Before and after each session, researchers collected saliva samples to measure cortisol levels, which are commonly used to track stress.

What made the findings notable was that participants could not consciously identify when the low-frequency sound was being played. Despite that, those exposed to infrasound showed higher cortisol levels, suggesting their bodies were reacting to something they were unable to hear.

Researchers also found that participants exposed to the frequency reported feeling more irritable, less engaged with the music and more emotionally negative overall.

Why haunted places are part of the conversation

The findings have renewed scientific interest in reports of paranormal activity because infrasound is often present in environments people associate with unexplained experiences.

Natural sources include volcanic eruptions, avalanches, storms and stampeding animals, which has led some researchers to believe humans may have evolved to treat these frequencies as warning signals. In modern settings, infrasound can be produced by industrial machinery, air conditioning systems, traffic, railways and wind farms.

That has prompted scientists to examine whether some locations believed to be haunted may actually be exposing visitors to environmental conditions that create fear.

Rodney Schmaltz has even taken students to paranormal attractions such as Deadmonton to explore possible scientific explanations behind frightening experiences. Previous experiments found that visitors moved more quickly through the attraction when infrasound was introduced.

Why the findings matter beyond ghost stories

Researchers acknowledge that the study was small, partly because cortisol testing is expensive, but they believe the findings open the door for larger investigations.

The research may have implications far beyond paranormal tourism. Scientists say it could help experts better understand environmental noise pollution and how hidden frequencies affect both humans and animals.

While the study does not claim to explain every ghost story, it offers a compelling possibility that some paranormal experiences may be rooted in biology rather than the supernatural. Sometimes, the scariest thing in the room may be something you cannot hear at all.

More For You

SpaceX's Falcon Heavy: 11 missions the launch vehicle has powered
SpaceX delays Falcon Heavy launch, spotlight shifts to rocket’s early missions
Getty Images

SpaceX's Falcon Heavy: 11 missions the launch vehicle has powered

  • Launch aborted seconds before liftoff due to weather
  • Falcon Heavy to carry ViaSat-3 F3 for Asia-Pacific internet
  • Rocket’s first three missions continue to shape its role

SpaceX called off its Falcon Heavy launch on April 27 less than 30 seconds before liftoff, halting the countdown due to weather concerns. The rocket had already been fuelled when the delay was issued. A fresh attempt is now scheduled for April 28 at 10:17am ET (7:47pm IST).

The mission, set to launch from Kennedy Space Center, will carry the ViaSat-3 F3 satellite, part of a programme aimed at expanding high-speed internet coverage across the Asia-Pacific region. If successful, the launch will also feature Falcon Heavy’s signature dual booster landing at Cape Canaveral, an event that typically produces sonic booms across Florida’s Space Coast.

Keep ReadingShow less