anatomy chapter 8 - the ear
what is sound
Sound creates vibrations in the air that beat against the eardrum, which pushes a series of tiny bones that move internal fluid against a membrane that triggers tiny hair cells that stimulate neurons, which in turn send actions potentials to the brain which interprets them as sound
what is the main job of these three small bones
amplify sound
allows pressure in the middle ear to be equalized with the atmospheric pressure
auditory tube
what is the purpose of the pinna
catch sound waves and pass them along deeper into the ear
contains the organ of corti
cochlea
which part of the inner ear (in the labyrinth) is responsible for hearing
cochlea
structures composing the bony or osseous labyrinth
cochlea, semicircular canals, vestibule
what are the three major ares of the ear
external middle inner
the vibrations from the tympanic membrane are passed to the ______
fluid
this is important because from this point the sound waves go through ____ not ____
fluid, air
where does the sound go after the pinna
funneled down into the external acoustic meatus and toward your middle and inner ear
collectively called the ossicles (middle ear)
hammer, stirrup, anvil
each canal can detect a different kind of
head movement
the external and middle ear are only involved with
hearing
the inner ear is involved with
hearing and maintaining your equilibrium
how does spinning around make us sick
it creates a sensory conflict, sensory conflict causes motion sickness
What else occurs in your ears equally as important as hearing?
maintaining your equilibrium
what is the order sound travels from the tympanic membrane through the bones
malleus, incus, stapes
transmits the vibrations from the stirrup to the fluid in the inner ear
oval window
what is the name of the inner ear part that the stapes touches
oval window
structures composing the outer ear
pinna, external acoustic meatus (eAm), tympanic membrane
there are three semicircular canals all designed to run along ____ that go in different directions
planes
contain receptors for the sense of equilibrium
semicircular canal, vestibule
ear structures not involved with hearing
semicircular canals, vestibule
what are the smallest bones in our body
stapes, malleus, incus
the tympanic membrane is the boundary between what
the external and middle ear
the canals are able to read the direction of our head by :
the movement of the fluid
instead of being controlled by sound waves what is it controlled by
the movement of your head
how is the sense of hearing like the sense of sound
they both use fluids
vibrates as sound waves hit it, transmits the vibrations to the ossicles
tympanic membrane
we use the _____ _____ instead of the cochlea for balance
vestibular apparatus
which part is for balance
vestibular apparatus