Can You Hear Your Eyeballs Move?

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loud.jpgThis may seem like a question for a riddle or utter non-sense, but there are sufferers of an odd syndrome caused by serotonin and a little part of your brain called the nucleus accumbens. In Scientific American Mar. ‘07, there is a story of a neuroscientist that suffered from a horrid grating noise coming from his eyeballs while he tries to fall asleep.

Now before you start reading on, I want you to keep this thought in the back of your head: “Do you perceive the world around you as it really is, or just as your brain wants to interpret it?” Hopefully I have not lost you by now, but keep up as this gets interesting.

The story starts with Douglas Fields, the neuroscientist with “loud” eyeballs. In attending a neuroscience meeting in Atlanta, Georgia, he sat down with a college friend of his to have a couple of beers at a bar. When Douglas noticed Josef Rauschecker of Georgetown University drinking a beer as well, he acquired enough courage to ask him about his really unique problem since he knew Josef was an authority on the auditory cortex. Once Douglas gets his attention and starts describing how his eyeballs start to make a loud, irritating noise as soon as he tries to go to sleep, the guy sitting right next to him says, “Me, too!” Who knows what the actual likelihood of this happening is…but let me go on.

Once the two recover from being dumbfounded over this very strange, unique coincidence, Josef blurts out, “I know what your problem is.” Douglas thinks to himself:

What are the chances of meeting someone else who shares my oddball noise and in front of the only person in the world who could understand it?


Josef goes on to say that their problem is serotonin. “Serotonin is a neurotransmitter that stimulates neurons in the nucleus accumbens (NA) to activate it.” The nucleus accumbens or NA is basically an input regulation device. It allows a certain amount of sensory input into the conscious mind depending on what “we” are doing at that time. When one is deeply focused on a specific task, the NA will block out or heavily regulate unwanted noise or other sensory input. A good example is the selective hearing that men are so good at while watching a football game. His NA is blocking out the talking of his wife, so that he can continue watching his football game uninterrupted.

What does this mean for good old Douglas and his friend? Well, when Douglas was younger he injured his inner ear, and when his nerve fibers sprouted to repair the damage some of them “miss-wired” and ended up cross-wiring to his circuits that are responsible for vision and balance. So, some of the sensory input from his eyes that should go to his visual cortex ended up going to his auditory cortex causing him to hear his eyes move. How does that sound [Pun intended]?

Serotonin comes into play to control what the NA lets through when one tries to “fall” asleep. So when Douglas starts to enter into his twilight sleep, his NA falls asleep as well, allowing him to hear his eyeballs move. The same action occurs when he wakes up. Fortunately, all Douglas has to do is adjust his serotonin and he should never hear his eyeballs again.

After I originally read this story, I couldn’t stop thinking about how this proves that our reality is nothing but electrical inputs, and how we trust our brains to interpret them correctly. It is our brain that will decide what is essential and what is not. But, what if our brain does not interpret them in the way that represents what is really “out there”. What does that do to our sense of “reality”. So, is the world around you really like what you think it is, or is your brain wrong? I guess we will never know. But what can be learned from the above incredible story, is what you think you perceive may not be “really” reality.

  • Dksy
    i could seriously cry right now, every doctor i went to thought i was crazy when i told them i got this eyeball movement noise when i awoke for about 20 minutes, but after a recent surgery and missing my zoloft and abilify meds for 3 days, the noise is constant along with a sense of vertigo when i move them, i just refilled my meds and i am hoping this fixes the problem. its actually quite funny that doctors in the year 2010 still have no idea how to diagnose this, yet people on the internet banding together figured it out, thanks everyone, i thought i was losing my mind.....
  • imbyin
    I'm so glad I found this article and posts. I thought it was going nuts. Try explaining to others that your eyeballs are making a weird noise when you move them or that they feel dizzy. I stopped taking Setraline (Zoloft) 2 weeks ago - weened myself off for 7 days - and the "noise" started about a week ago. I hope it goes away! But I find comfort in knowing I'm not the only one with this odd symptom.
  • I have otosclerosis, which means that one of the tiny bones in my left ear is stuck. I can hear my eyes move when it's quiet, and I think that's the reason. I can also hear things INCREDIBLY loudly when the vibrations hit my bones. (Try holding a music box to your head if you have this and it's actually an amazingly beautiful sound.)
  • Guest
    I recently went off Paxil, a serotonin reuptake inhibitor. Since stopping Paxil, I have had this loud, strange clicking sound whenever I move my eyes. It's loudest when I get up in the morning and gets softer (or I don't notice it as much) as the day goes on. This article makes sense since I never had it before I started Paxil.
  • Guest
    I recently went off Paxil, a serotonin reuptake inhibitor. Since stopping Paxil, I have had this loud, strange clicking sound whenever I move my eyes. It's loudest when I get up in the morning and gets softer (or I don't notice it as much) as the day goes on. This article makes sense since I never had it before I started Paxil.
  • car62ol
    I recently went off Paxil, a serotonin reuptake inhibitor. Since stopping Paxil, I have had this loud, strange clicking sound whenever I move my eyes. It's loudest when I get up in the morning and gets softer (or I don't notice it as much) as the day goes on. This article makes sense since I never had it before I started Paxil. Question is for others like me. Does it ever go away? I've been off Paxil for a couple of weeks now. Sorry if you had to read this 3 times. I can't get rid of the first two!
  • anjuli
    Thank you! Thank you!
    After reading many article online (most to do with withdrawal symptoms of people coming off meds), you finally say something that *resonates* with me!

    I feel so relieved now. :)
  • cindy
    This is very good news and gives me hope.
  • myeyes
    I can't believe what I am reading!! I thought I was going crazy. I too have never had any of these symptoms until I started taking setraline for anxiety connected to PTSD. If I missed a dose the symptoms would occur. I didn't put the two together until about two weeks ago. Now I have stopped the medication cold turkey for about a week and I feel horrible. Will it go away if I just ride it out? I don't want the medicine anymore. Will my hormones eventually adjust? Please, someone with the experience, please give me some guidance. Thanks.
  • wowneveragain
    Hi all. It is comforting to hear that I am not insane! My burning question, like 'myeyes', above, is whether this will go away. Please, if, the symptoms have disappeared for you, let us know how long it took. I pray that it HAS gone away! Thank you.
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