The Microwave Auditory Effect James C. Lin, Ph.D. degrees in electrical engineering from the University of Washington, Seattle University of Illinois Chicago
``` The preceding sections document that an audible sound originates from within the head when human subjects are exposed to pulsed microwave radiation. The auditory detection of pulsed microwaves in laboratory animals has been confirmed both in behavioral and neurophysiological studies. The site of microwave-to-sound conversion is shown to be in the brain tissue. The primary mechanism of interaction is microwave pulse-induced thermoelastic expansion of brain matter. ```