No one can stay in the quietest room in the world for more than an hour
news.com.auThis claim returns every few months and always makes me laugh a little. I studied Acoustic Engineering for 5 years on AGH University of Science and Technology, PL, and the uni had its own anechoic chamber. I'm pretty sure it's not as isolated as the one holding Guinness record, but it really is completely quiet nonetheless. The amount of time one had to spend there sometimes easily exceeded one hour; several PhD students did stone studies on for how long can they stay locked there in complete silence and darkness, one person at time - they made it through the night and didn't lose their sanity. On another note I always find it a bit strange that many people can't hear/feel their own pulse with little focus and require a chamber to experience it.
Typo, "some studies", not "stone". There was none of the so-called getting stoned beforehand...
would have been an interesting twist but probably not a great time
I bet a deaf person could, or someone with kids
I doubt I could hear my own blood flowing over the mild tinitis I have.
From the article...
> With no sound from the outside world coming in, the total and utter silence will gradually turn into an unbearable ringing in your ears.
I think that's probably what would do me in. I'd love to hear all the squishy bits go, I bet that part would be really neat, but it takes about 60dB to drown out my tinnitus and that would be loud in there.
BS headline.