Hearing Mechanism
There are three main components of the ear: the outer ear, the middle ear and the inner ear. The outer ear is composed of the visible part of the ear (or the pinna), the auditory canal and the eardrum. The eardrum is made of an airtight flap of skin. Sounds travel in waves, and when these waves arrive at the eardrum, they cause it to vibrate at a certain rate in accordance with its frequency. The eardrum simplifies incoming air pressure waves to a single change with a certain amplitude. This allows for the differentiation of sound. The middle ear consists of a small air filled chamber that is located behind the eardrum. Within this chamber are three smallest bones in the body, known collectively as the ossicles. They aid in the transmission and amplification of the vibrations from the ear drum to the inner ear. The inner ear contains the cochlea, which is a spiral shaped, fluid filled tube that is considered the organ of auditory transduction. It is divided lengthwise by the basilar membrane, a structure that oscillates when vibrations from the ossicles arrive at the cochlear fluid. This motion causes the movement of the hair cells, specialize auditory receptors located within the basilar membrane. The space–time pattern of vibrations in the basilar membrane is converted to a spatial–temporal pattern of firings on the auditory nerve, which transmits information about the sound to the brainstem.
Read more about this topic: Auditive Perception
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