The Hum: Why Only Some People Hear a Strange Sound
Author: Norwegian University of Science and Technology
Published: 2026/06/02
Publication Details: Peer-Reviewed, Research, Study, Analysis
Contents: Synopsis - Introduction - Main - Insights, Updates
Synopsis: This research, peer reviewed and published in PLOS One, examines The Hum - a persistent low-frequency sound that some people hear while others nearby notice nothing at all. A team led by NTNU professor Markus Drexl tested 28 people in Germany who report an unexplained buzzing, checking whether they had unusually sensitive low-frequency hearing or whether their ears produced measurable sounds of their own. The work is useful because it carefully separates the few cases that may stem from real, measurable sound waves from the more common explanation of low-frequency tinnitus, offering reassurance and a clearer framework for clinicians, audiologists, and anyone - including seniors and people with hearing sensitivities - who has been troubled by a noise they cannot trace or prove to others.
At a Glance
- 1 - The Hum was first documented in Bristol, England in the mid-1970s, when the local newspaper began receiving letters from readers describing an inexplicable sound, and it has since been reported in cities across Canada, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, and the United States.
- 2 - A Canadian teacher named Glen MacPherson was so intrigued after hearing the sound that he launched the interactive World Hum Map and Database Project in 2012 to gather reports from around the world.
- 3 - The healthy inner ear naturally generates faint sounds of its own, known as oto-acoustic emissions, typically between roughly 500 and 5000 Hertz, and a small number of people can actually perceive them.
- Topic Definition: The Hum
The Hum is the popular name for a persistent, low-frequency droning or buzzing sound that a minority of people report hearing, typically indoors and most often at night, even though others in the same place perceive nothing and no obvious external source can be found. First documented in Bristol, England in the mid-1970s and later reported in coastal cities and densely populated areas across the United Kingdom, North America, and beyond, it is sometimes felt as a vibration and can range from a mild annoyance to a genuinely distressing experience. Current research suggests it arises from more than one cause, with a small number of cases linked to unusually sensitive low-frequency hearing and the majority better explained as a form of low-frequency tinnitus originating within the listener's own auditory system.
Introduction
A strange humming phenomenon
Some people find the sound annoying but can live with it. Others can get sick from this low-frequency sound, which is often also experienced as a vibration.
The humming sound isn't easy to hear outdoors, but it often appears indoors - and is most noticeable when you've gone to sleep at night. If you look out the window to see if there is something with a motor in the neighborhood, there's nothing to see. And others who are in the same place hear nothing.
Main Content
First discovered in coastal cities
The phenomenon was first recorded and discussed in the city of Bristol, England in the mid-1970s. Suddenly, the Bristol Evening Post began receiving letter after letter from people who heard an inexplicable sound, and wondered where it came from.
One theory was that the humming sound came from large, industrial fans that were located inside the warehouse of a large department store. However, when the warehouse was closed down a few years later, people continued to hear the sound.
Since then, the sound has been recorded in several places in the United Kingdom, mainly in coastal cities such as Hythe, Plymouth, Southampton, and Swansea, but also in London. The sound is called The Hum phenomenon, or simply The Hum.
In the 1990s, it cropped up in the United States, first in the city of Taos, New Mexico and in the city of Kokomo, Indiana. The phenomenon has since been recorded worldwide: in Canada, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, and several European cities. The sound is typically reported in relatively densely populated areas.
A couple of years ago, people in the Oslo area also reported an unexplained humming sound, according to the Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation.
Canadian Glen MacPherson began hearing the humming sound when he lived and worked as a teacher on Canada's west coast. When he moved to another city in the same area, the sound disappeared. He became so interested in the sound phenomenon that he started the interactive World Hum Map and Database Project in 2012, which collects data from places and people where the sound has been noted.

Many different theories
Many different theories have been offered to explain the cause of the phenomenon; everything from acoustic pollution from human-made sources to sounds that nature itself makes - as well as conspiracy theories that the sound is produced by the CIA or even aliens.
There are many human sources of low-frequency sound. These can include ventilation systems, heat pumps, traffic noise, windmills, and more. Examples of natural sources include the sounds of waves crashing along the coast and wind sweeping through the landscape.
The Hum has attracted the interest of hearing and audiology researchers worldwide. Markus Drexl, a professor at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology, is among this self-selected group. He and two PhD research fellows and a postdoc have conducted a study of 28 people in Germany who experience hearing an unexplained buzzing or humming.
Sounds that can be measured
The researchers tested two hypotheses. One was that The Hum can be measured, both from human-made infrastructure and industry and also from nature itself, which creates low-frequency sounds.
"We know that there are people who hear low-frequency sounds that can actually be measured, even if other people don't hear them. But it's not so easy to find the source of these sound waves, because it's a struggle to localize low-frequency sounds," Drexl said. These sounds have long wavelengths that can travel over great distances.
Extra good hearing?
The first thing the researchers did was test whether the participants had particularly good hearing for low-frequency sounds that are actually known to exist. Most did not, except for two participants who had better hearing than average at certain low frequencies.
"Even though the group we tested was small, it still means that the hypothesis of having especially good hearing for low-frequency sounds does not hold for most people," Drexl said.
He adds a small caveat: There are differences in hearing thresholds (microstructures) that make it possible for some people to hear sensitively in a very narrow frequency range, for example between 50 and 51 Hertz. These nuances are not captured by conventional hearing tests.
The ear can produce sounds itself
The cochlea in the inner ear itself produces weak sounds with different frequencies, typically between about 500 and 5000 Hertz. These sounds have no function of their own, but are a by-product of a physiological sound amplification process.
"Most of us don't hear these sounds. However, a few people can actually hear the sounds that the ear itself produces. And these sounds can be measured objectively," Drexl said.
These particular sounds are called oto-acoustic emissions and can be detected by placing a sensitive microphone in the ear canal. In some people, these spontaneous oto-acoustic emissions can be experienced as troublesome tinnitus.
"One hypothesis was that the participants in our group could hear oto-acoustic emissions at low frequencies. That's why we tested whether they had them," says Drexl. But the answer was no.
Sounds that cannot be measured
"Then there are people who hear something that cannot be measured objectively. We believe people in this category have a form of low-frequency tinnitus," Drexl said.
Tinnitus or ringing in the ears is when you hear a sound in the ear or in the head, which is not caused by an external sound source. Many people experience tinnitus, either permanently or for shorter periods. These individuals first experience the sounds in their ears as a sound coming from outside. But as the sound persists, even when they move to other places, they gradually become aware that the source of the sound is not external.
Drexl says that based on what is known about hearing and the tests they conducted on study participants, the best explanation is twofold. A few people who hear The Hum actually have particularly good low-frequency hearing. However, for most people, it may be a form of tinnitus, meaning a sound that originates from inside the auditory system.
"Based on our results, although we haven't ruled out cases of physical external sound sources, we suggest that subjective tinnitus in the low-frequency range is often the cause of hearing pulsations of low-frequency sound perceptions," he said.
Must understand the entire auditory system
Markus Drexl became interested in The Hum phenomenon because he studies low-frequency sounds.
"What we know about the hearing system is mainly based on how we capture and process sound with higher frequencies. We know less about how the auditory system handles and processes low-frequency sound, or infrasound," he said.
Drexl says that over the past decade there has been a growing concern about noise from technical sources in the low-frequency range (between about 20 and 250 Hz) and the infrasound range (below 20 Hz).
"If we want to conduct a thorough assessment of low-frequency sounds and infrasound, we first need a better understanding of how sensory systems process low-frequency sound and infrasound," he said.
Reference:
On the potential sources of a low-frequency sound percept that only a few can perceive, Plos One, March 2026.
Insights, Analysis, and Developments
Editorial Note: What makes this study worth sitting with is its humility - rather than chasing a single dramatic cause for a sound that has fueled decades of speculation about industry, nature, and even conspiracy, the researchers acknowledge how little is genuinely understood about how the ear handles the low end of the spectrum, and they make the case that answering questions about The Hum first requires a better grasp of how our sensory systems process low-frequency sound and infrasound at all.Attribution/Source(s): This peer reviewed publication was selected for publishing by the editors of Disabled World (DW) due to its relevance to the disability community. Originally authored by Norwegian University of Science and Technology and published on 2026/06/02, this content may have been edited for style, clarity, or brevity.