Overview
Voice-to-Skull (V2K) is a neurological attack technology that transmits audio directly to the brain through electromagnetic means. The system exploits two distinct mechanisms to bypass conventional hearing and deliver auditory information to the central nervous system.
Mechanism 1: Digital Audio via Microwave Pulses
This method generates microwave pulses at each transition from positive to negative in a voice wave cycle. Each pulse produces an audible click that is perceived by the brain as digital audio. This approach has the capability to penetrate walls and other physical barriers, enabling covert transmission of information across obstacles.
Mechanism 2: Analog Audio via Frequency Modulation
This method involves frequency modulating a steady tone with voice wave patterns. The ear perceives only hissing sounds, while the brain interprets the signal as coherent speech or audio content. This analog approach does not penetrate walls and requires line-of-sight transmission.
Applications in Neurocognitive Warfare
V2K represents a significant advancement in non-kinetic warfare capabilities, enabling:
- Covert communication: Direct brain-to-brain messaging without external devices
- Surveillance monitoring: Potential for EEG-based surveillance through resonant frequency bioeffects
- Neurological disruption: Integration with broader directed energy weapon systems
- Cognitive targeting: Precise delivery of information to specific neural pathways
Related Technologies
V2K operates within the broader framework of neurocognitive warfare, which includes:
- Directed Energy Weapons (DEWs) for crowd control and neurological disruption
- Microwave auditory effect mechanisms documented in historical research
- Cognitive Electronic Warfare systems targeting CNS function
- Neural dust devices using ultrasound for deep tissue neural interfaces
Research Context
The technology builds upon decades of microwave hearing research, including Jaski's 1960 experiments documenting ringing in ears and brain pulsing at resonant frequencies. These findings correlate with symptoms observed in Havana Syndrome cases involving directional auditory phenomena.