If anyone here knows electronics back me up on this.
When you have an op-amp, it needs a good reference level, which is usually ground or virtual ground, this is a steady voltage, which is why it's called reference. If you have no ground or a ground fault, it introduces all kinds of imbalance to the circuit, this can manifest as "noise" in the circuit.
Our nerves are electrochemical, sodium and potassium channels along the axon. There is a RESTING voltage potential of around -70millivolts, thats -0.70 volts. That's silence in your auditory nerve.
An impulse goes to about +30 millivolts which is a difference of 100 millivolts or .1 volt. 1/15th a AA battery.
View attachment 24292
http://www.biologymad.com/nervoussystem/nerveimpulses.htm
I've taken 110 volts to the hand which is 1,100 times more and it never caused a sensory input dysfunction, but chop my hand off and I'll get phantom limb sensations.
Doesnt this mean that the phantom auditory sensation aka tinnitus is from loss of sensory input? Perhaps a lack of the resting voltage potential from intact nerves?
Take analog TVs for example, no plug, static, video, static hiss audio. Not black silence. Plug in a source with no content, black and silence. I think this is tinnitus.
RIP this theory to shreds if you can please.