AP Psych Hearing and the Ear
Eardrum
A tight membrane that vibrates when in contact with sound waves; helps to amplify the sound waves as they lose strength travelling down the auditory canal
Semicircular Canals/Vestibular Sacs
Attached to the canals of the cochlea; they contain fluids, which, when the head is rotated and fluids jostled, helps to determine the head's position and movement (vestibular sense)
Outer Ear
Channels sound waves through the auditory canal towards the eardrum
Inner Ear
Consists of the cochlea, the semicircular canals, oval window, basilar membrane, auditory nerve, and hair cells
Middle Ear
Consists of three small bones--the hammer, anvil, and stirrup, called the ossicles.
Auditory Nerve
Convergence of axons of the nerve cells adjacent to the hair cells, which then sends neural messages to the auditory cortex (in the temporal lobe)
Basilar Membrane
Membrane within the cochlea; the vibration caused by the jostled fluid in the cochlea bends the hair cells lining its surface
Oval Window
Outer membrane of the cochlea, attached to the stirrup, which vibrates when the ossicles vibrate, and jostles the fluid within the cochlea
Ossicles
Series of three tiny bones in the middle ear (the hammer, the anvil, and the stirrup) that vibrate when in contact with the vibrations of the eardrum
Amplitude
Strength of wave; determines a sound's loudness
Cochlea
Tightly-wound structure within the inner ear, whose fluids, when vibrated by the ossicles, are jostled, which causes ripples in the basilar membrane.
Frequency
Wavelength; determines pitch
Hair Cells
When the hair cells are bent by the jostled fluid in the cochlea and the ripples in the basilar membrance, the hair cell movement triggers a neural impulse in adjacent nerve cells