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The Indian ExpressApril 29, 2026

Haunted houses, horror and the sound of dread

The house is quiet, but never quite silent. In the small hours, when the world outside has fallen silent, it seems to acquire a secret life of its own. Shadows deepen, floorboards creak unexpectedly. The air acquires a watchfulness, as if someone is lingering just beyond the closed door, waiting to be let in. Recall the oppressive interiors of The Haunting of Hill House, or the slow, encroaching dread of The Turn of the Screw: For years and years, this unease — and the conviction that one is not alone — has come to define the imagination of the the uncanny or the supernatural. Turns out not all of it relates to the paranormal.

Recent research by psychologists at MacEwan University in Canada, published in Frontiers in Behavioural Neuroscience, suggests that such atmospheres may be engineered not by spirits but by sound too low to be audible to the naked ear. Infrasound, those subterranean frequencies produced by ageing systems of heat and ventilation, assumes a life of its own when ambient noise dies down. The house is not haunted so much as it is resonant, its antiquated mechanisms generating a continuous hum that the mind struggles to interpret. For those predisposed to horror, the body’s subtle distress manifests through restlessness and a prickling sense of being observed. For the more intrepid, however, it may simply show up as irritation, and the annoyance that comes with figuring out the maintenance of an old house.

The explanation, however, does not entirely dismiss the paranormal. If anything, it relocates the source of dread from the unknown outside to the nervous system. Or, what the British philosopher Gilbert Ryle called the “ghost in the machine” in his critique of Descartes’ doctrine of mind-body dualism: That there is such seamless coherence between body and mind that the faintest physical disturbance can ripple outward into meaning – and in, this case, into trepidation.

Key GK Takeaways for CLAT
  • 1Scientific explanations for paranormal events, like infrasound causing unease, can impact the credibility of witness testimony in court. Under the Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam (BSA), the reliability of evidence is paramount. This research underscores how a witness's perception could be challenged, compelling courts to prioritize objective, verifiable facts over subjective experiences that may have a scientific basis unknown to the observer.
  • 2The research on infrasound highlights a unique form of environmental pollution with direct public health implications. These low-frequency sounds, often emanating from aging urban infrastructure, can cause significant psychological distress without being consciously heard. This challenges current environmental governance frameworks, suggesting a need to expand noise pollution regulations beyond the audible spectrum to protect citizens' mental well-being in urban settings.
  • 3The editorial's scientific demystification of paranormal phenomena directly supports India's constitutional goals. Article 51A(h) mandates the development of scientific temper, a principle that governance must promote to counter superstition. This research provides a rational tool for public awareness campaigns and strengthens the legislative intent behind state-level anti-superstition acts, which aim to prevent exploitation rooted in irrational fears.
  • 4The concept of infrasound in older buildings has tangible economic consequences for the real estate market. A property perceived as 'haunted' due to such phenomena can suffer from diminished value and stigma, impacting both sellers and buyers. This raises important questions under the Real Estate (Regulation and Development) Act, 2016, concerning the disclosure of latent structural defects that could affect a property's habitability and market price.