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The Silent Frequency That Makes Old Buildings Feel Haunted

Researchers say infrasound -- low-frequency vibrations from things like pipes, HVAC systems, and traffic that humans can't consciously hear -- may help explain why some old buildings feel unsettling or "haunted." Rodney Schmaltz, senior author and professor at MacEwan, says: "Consider visiting a supposedly haunted building. Your mood shifts, you feel agitated, but you can't see or hear anything unusual. In an old building, there is a good chance that infrasound is present, particularly in basements where aging pipes and ventilation systems produce low-frequency vibrations. If you were told the building was haunted, you might attribute that agitation to something supernatural. In reality, you may simply have been exposed to infrasound." ScienceBlog.com reports: Infrasound sits below roughly 20 Hz, the lower limit of what the human ear can ordinarily detect. It's generated by storms, by volcanic activity, by tectonic rumblings deep in the Earth's crust, and (this is the part that matters) by the mundane mechanical heartbeat of cities: ageing pipes, HVAC systems, traffic, industrial machinery. "Infrasound is pervasive in everyday environments, appearing near ventilation systems, traffic, and industrial machinery," says Schmaltz. Most of the time, we walk through it without a second thought. The question the team wanted to answer was whether walking through it was actually doing something to us, whether the frequency was registered somewhere below consciousness, somewhere we couldn't readily name.

The experimental setup was deliberately ordinary. Thirty-six undergraduate students filed one at a time into isolated testing rooms and sat alone with a piece of music, either a calming instrumental or a horror-themed ambient track designed to provoke discomfort. Hidden subwoofers, including a 12-inch unit positioned in an adjacent hallway and a 16-inch speaker oriented toward the ceiling in a neighboring room, pumped infrasound at approximately 18 Hz into half those spaces. The participants had no idea. That last point turned out to be rather important. When the team ran the numbers, they found that participants couldn't reliably identify whether infrasound had been present. Their guesses were, statistically speaking, no better than chance. And according to Schmaltz, participants' beliefs about whether the infrasound was on had no detectable effect on their cortisol or mood. The physiological response didn't care what the participants thought was happening. It just happened anyway.

What happened, specifically, was this: those exposed to infrasound reported higher irritability, lower interest in the music, and a tendency to rate the music as sadder, irrespective of whether it was the calming or the horror track. Cortisol levels, measured before and about 20 minutes after exposure, were also elevated. Kale Scatterty, the PhD student who led the work, notes that irritability and cortisol do tend to move together under ordinary stress, but adds that "infrasound exposure had effects on both outcomes that went beyond that natural relationship." That distinction matters more than it might seem. Previous theories about infrasound and paranormal experience have often leaned on anxiety as the explanatory mechanism, the idea that low-frequency sound triggers a kind of free-floating dread that the mind then reaches for supernatural explanations to account for. The new data don't really support that picture. Measures of anxiety didn't budge significantly. What went up was irritability and disinterest, a kind of sour, low-grade aversion rather than fear. That's perhaps a more honest description of how a lot of ghost stories actually feel in the telling: not screaming terror, but wrong atmosphere, a sense of unease that never quite crystallizes into something you can point at. The study has been published this week in Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

The Register

Biting the hand that feeds IT — Enterprise Technology News and Analysis

Tenstorrent’s Galaxy Blackhole AI servers escape the event horizon

RISC-V-based systems pack 32 Blackhole accelerators in a 6U, $110K chassis

Tenstorrent on Tuesday announced the general availability of its Galaxy Blackhole AI compute platform.…

Brussels orders Google to share Android's AI sandbox with the other kids

DMA enforcers want rival assistants to get same deep device access as Gemini

Those pencil pushers at the European Commission are drawing up measures to ensure Google opens up its Android smartphone platform to something few users asked for – competing AI services.…

UK.gov's DCMS to new CDIO: migrate from Google to Microsoft, overhaul ERP, build a team

£125k and a pension await whoever can herd 6 departments onto single platform without losing will to live

Later today, prospective candidates will log onto a UK government call to convince themselves that £125k a year is worth the trouble of tackling a technological landscape swamped by colliding projects.…

Colossal

The best of art, craft, and visual culture since 2010.

From Micro to Mega, Jon McCormack’s Striking Photos Reveal Nature’s Patterns

From Micro to Mega, Jon McCormack’s Striking Photos Reveal Nature’s Patterns

Growing up in the Australian Outback, where he first picked up a camera as a teenager to document his surroundings in the bush, Jon McCormack developed a keen eye for the beauty and subtleties of nature. Throughout his career, he’s stepped foot on all seven continents. Yet the idea for his new book, Patterns: Art of the Natural World, emerged from a period of quieter reflection.

Like many of us during the pandemic, McCormack’s travels were limited to his immediate area. He began visiting the same spots repeatedly and “discovered a new way of seeing, using photography to reveal the hidden harmony and symmetry of the natural world,” says a statement. Patterns, forthcoming from Damiani Books, draws upon this patient and attentive approach to nature’s rhythms, emphasizing its interconnectedness, resilience, and fragility.

a photograph by Jon McCormack of bright yellow aspen trees along the edge of a lake in the mountains
Golden aspens and their reflection join to shape a luminous triangle of color

The snapshots view slivers of our world from a range of perspectives, whether honing in on the recurring features of crystals or flying over a flamboyance of flamingos in Kenya. Patterns contains 90 striking images and text contributions from fellow photographers and conservationists.

Find your copy on Bookshop, and keep up with McCormack’s travels on Instagram.

a photograph by Jon McCormack of an aerial view of streams that look abstract
Patterns of minerals left behind by volcanic eruptions in Iceland
a photograph by Jon McCormack of an abstract pattern in nature
A microscope reveals the crystalline patterns of caffeine
a photograph by Jon McCormack of prismatic spray above a waterfall in Yosemite National Park
A prismatic waterfall at Yosemite
a photograph by Jon McCormack of birds flying over yellow streams, seen from high in the air
Flamingos in flight mirror the shifting patterns etched across Kenya’s Lake Magadi
a photograph by Jon McCormack of dolphins swimming, seen from a vertical perspective
A pod of dolphins swim near the Channel Islands
a photograph by Jon McCormack of microscopic crystals in repeating patterns
In every drop of water, diatoms are algae with glass-like silica shells that resemble tiny jewels under a microscope
the cover of the book 'Patterns' by Jon McCormack featuring an abstract up-close image of stone

Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $7 per month. The article From Micro to Mega, Jon McCormack’s Striking Photos Reveal Nature’s Patterns appeared first on Colossal.

ZOEK. Tasjesdief Koningsdag vol in beeld @POL_Breda

Social

Het zijn op Koningsdag altijd precies de enige niet in oranje geklede zwarte capuchons waar je dit het minst van verwacht. En dat blijft schrikken! Maar goed, bent u of kent u het heerschap? Dan hoort politie Breda (Twitter/Insta) dat ongetwijfeld graag ondanks dat er nog geen opsporingsverzoek is gepubliceerd.

Circulaire economie!

Social

De nieuwe partijlogo’s van DNA en PRO verwijzen naar de natuur, maar wat willen ze ermee?

De natuur doet het goed in de logo’s van Nederlandse politieke partijen. DNA heeft een dubbele helix, PRO een groene roos, de PVV een meeuw. Maar is het een goed idee?

Fountain (after Marcel Duchamp)

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Fountain (after Marcel Duchamp)

Hearts and Bones

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Hearts and Bones

De Speld

Uw vaste prik voor betrouwbaar nieuws.

Steeds meer dertigers lijden aan verbouwing

​Steeds meer dertigers in Nederland kampen met een hardnekkige vorm van verbouwing, blijkt uit cijfers van het CBS. Volgens het overheidsinstituut lijden steeds meer huizenkopers aan deze aandoening, zo ook de 30-jarige Stijn (echte naam is bekend bij de redactie).

“Om iets als de witheid van RAL 9010 kan ik me een hele middag druk maken”, vertelt een terneergeslagen Stijn, die alleen nog over verbouwen kan praten met zijn vriendin. “Ik weet gewoon niet meer wie zij is, behalve dat ze een voorkeur heeft voor koraalblauw.”

Verbouwen leidt vaak tot een sociaal isolement. “Niemand snapt waar ik mee zit. Wat er in me omgaat. Vragen als ‘laminaat of PVC' spoken continu door mijn hoofd”, vertelt de anonieme dertiger die werd gediagnosticeerd door zijn aannemer. “Ze willen het over andere dingen hebben, zoals voetbal, of de staat van de wereld. Maar ik wil nog maar één ding: mensen vertellen over mijn fundering.”

Voor Stijn gloort er hoop aan de horizon: zijn twee beste vrienden hebben ook een huis gekocht, en overwegen de keuken en badkamer aan te pakken.

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