Anonymous ID: 0c6431 Jan. 7, 2019, 7:17 p.m. No.4655490   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Communicating Via the Microwave Auditory Effect

Award Information

Agency:

Department of Defense

Branch:

Air Force

Contract:

N/A

Agency Tracking Number:

19903

Amount:

$739,569.00

Phase:

Phase II

Program:

SBIR

Awards Year:

1995

Solicitation Year:

N/A

Solicitation Topic Code:

N/A

Solicitation Number:

N/A

Small Business Information

SCIENCE & ENGINEERING ASSOC., INC.

Sea Plaza, 6100 Uptown Blvd,, Ne, Suite 700, Albuquerque, NM, 87110

DUNS:

N/A

HUBZone Owned:

N

Woman Owned:

N

Socially and Economically Disadvantaged:

N

Principal Investigator

Name: Brian Kohn

Phone: (505) 884-2300

Business Contact

Phone: () -

Research Institution

N/A

Abstract

In this research program, we plan to investigate a revolutionary new form of communication based on the microwave auditory effect. This proposed communication idea satisfies the requirements for an innovative, natural interface requiring no learning or training for efficient operation and effective communications. The purpose of the program proposed here is to extend the results of a recent feasibility study, performed for the Armstrong Laboratory/OEDR. The study found that voice communications, via the microwave auditory effect, are highly feasible. In Phase I of this SBIR, we propose to investigate the range of potential applications for this radically different form of voice communication and recommend hardware and systems concepts suitable for laboratory and brassboard demonstrations to be built under Phase II.

  • Information listed above is at the time of submission. *

Anonymous ID: 0c6431 Jan. 7, 2019, 7:26 p.m. No.4655649   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5689

Microwave auditory effect

The microwave auditory effect, also known as the microwave hearing effect or the Frey effect, consists of the human perception of audible clicks, or even speech, induced by pulsed or modulated radio frequencies. The communications are generated directly inside the human head without the need of any receiving electronic device. The effect was first reported by persons working in the vicinity of radar transponders during World War II. In 1961, the American neuroscientist Allan H. Frey studied this phenomenon and was the first to publish information on the nature of the microwave auditory effect.[1] The cause is thought to be thermoelastic expansion of portions of the auditory apparatus,[2] although competing theories explain the results of interferometric holography tests differently.[3]

 

Research in the U.S.

 

Allan H. Frey was the first American to publish on the microwave auditory effect (MAE). Frey's Human auditory system response to modulated electromagnetic energy appeared in the Journal of Applied Physiology in 1961. In his experiments, the subjects were discovered to be able to hear appropriately pulsed microwave radiation, from a distance of a few inches to hundreds of feet from the transmitter. In Frey's tests, a repetition rate of 50 Hz was used, with pulse width between 10–70 microseconds. The perceived loudness was found to be linked to the peak power density, instead of average power density. At 1.245 GHz, the peak power density for perception was below 80 mW/cm2. According to Frey, the induced sounds were described as "a buzz, clicking, hiss, or knocking, depending on several transmitter parameters, i.e., pulse width and pulse-repetition rate". By changing transmitter parameters, Frey was able to induce the "perception of severe buffeting of the head, without such apparent vestibular symptoms as dizziness or nausea". Other transmitter parameters induced a pins and needles sensation. Frey experimented with nerve-deaf subjects, and speculated that the human detecting mechanism was in the cochlea, but at the time of the experiment the results were inconclusive due to factors such as tinnitus.[1][4]

 

Auditory sensations of clicking or buzzing have been reported by some workers at modern day microwave transmitting sites that emit pulsed microwave radiation. Auditory response to transmitted frequencies from approximately 200 MHz to at least 3 GHz has been reported. The cause is thought to be thermoelastic expansion of portions of auditory apparatus, and the generally accepted mechanism is rapid (but minuscule, in the range of 10−5 °C) heating of brain by each pulse, and the resulting pressure wave traveling through the skull to the cochlea.[4]

 

In 1975, an article by neuropsychologist Don Justesen discussing radiation effects on human perceptions referred to an experiment by Joseph Sharp and Mark Grove at the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research during which Sharp and Grove reportedly were able to recognize nine out of ten words transmitted by "voice modulated microwaves". Since the radiation levels approached the (then current) 10 mW/cm² limit of safe exposure, critics have observed that under such conditions brain damage from thermal effects of high power microwave radiation would occur, and there was "no conclusive evidence for MAE at lower energy densities".[5][6]

Anonymous ID: 0c6431 Jan. 7, 2019, 7:29 p.m. No.4655717   🗄️.is 🔗kun

From Wikipedia:

 

Numerous individuals suffering from auditory hallucinations, delusional disorders,[13] or other mental illnesses have claimed that government agents use forms of mind control technologies based on microwave signals to transmit sounds and thoughts into their heads as a form of electronic harassment, referring to the alleged technology as "voice to skull" or "V2K".[14]

 

There are extensive online support networks and numerous websites [13] maintained by people fearing mind control. California psychiatrist Alan Drucker has identified evidence of delusional disorders on many of these websites and other psychologists are divided over whether such sites reinforce mental troubles, or act as a form of group social support.[15]

 

Psychologists have identified many examples of people reporting 'mind control experiences' (MCEs) on self-published web pages that are "highly likely to be influenced by delusional beliefs". Common themes include "Bad Guys" using "psychotronics" and "microwaves", frequent mention of the CIA's MKULTRA project, and frequent citing of a scientific paper entitled "Human auditory system response to modulated electromagnetic energy".[16]