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How We Hear

Published on Jan 27, 2016

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PRESENTATION OUTLINE

HOW WE HEAR

By: Meghan Ahern and Cullen Murphy

THE OUTER EAR

  • Sound waves enter through here
  • Pinnae captures sound waves and channels them through the auditory canal
  • The number of waves lengths (frequency) entering ear determines the pitch
  • The amplitude will determine the strength of sound waves entering ear

AUDITORY CANAL

  • Channels sound waves to eardrum

THE EARDRUM

  • Skin stretched across opening of inner ear
  • Vibrates the sound waves (amplifys)
  • Sends sound waves to mid ear

THE MIDDLE EAR

  • Vibrations go through ossicles (hammer -> anvil ->stirrup)
  • Amplify and relay vibrations from ear drum
  • The oval window is where the stirrup attaches to the cochlea
  • Soundwaves from stirrup are sent to cochlea

THE COCHLEA

  • Snail shaped and fluid filled
  • Hearing receptor cells are located here and trigger nerve impulses
  • Incoming vibrations jostle fluid (pressure change)
  • Cause ripples in basilar membrane
  • Place and frequency theory helps determine the pitch of waves

HELMHOLTZ PLACE THEORY

  • Determines high pitch
  • Cochlea is stimulated in different parts
  • Each part of cochlea stimulated gives off a different pitch
  • Brain determines pitch by recognizing place generating neural signal
  • Many sound waves =high pitch

FREQUENCY THEORY

  • Determines low pitch
  • Rate of nerve impulses traveling through auditory canal =frequency of tone
  • Volley Principle:
  • Neural cells alternate firing in rapid succession to form a combined frequency
  • Less amount of sound waves = lower pitch

BASILAR MEMBRANE

  • Vibrations from cochlea to basilar membrane trigger hair cell movement
  • Cilia: short, microscopic, hairlike vibrating structure- bend when stimulated
  • Triggers adjacent nerve cells
  • Causes neural impulses to be fired to auditory nerve

AUDITORY NERVE

  • Basilar membranes adjacent neural cell axons form auditory nerve
  • Send neural messages through thalamus
  • Transduction: sound waves are being changed into electrical impulses
  • From thalamus message sent to the temporal lobes auditory cortex
  • As message hits the brain we are able to hear