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Pinnae are the external part of a mammal’s ear. Their form suggests function to improve ear sensitivity by intercepting and reflecting sound toward the entrance to the ear canal. In humans pinnae are immobile relative to the head, but in other mammals dedicated muscles, along with head turning, allow pinnae to act as effective sound collectors. Bats echolocate using sound pulses: ultrasonic cries are emitted in this leaf-nose bat through the nostrils. The ‘leaf’ is a sound ‘director’, a beaming device. Loud output sounds create faint echoes by which the animal steers. Human –ear Illustrations from Gulick, W.L. 1971. Hearing, Physiology and Psychophysics Oxford Univ. Press, London Middle ear, suspensory ligaments support 3 small bones, ossicles: malleus, incus stapedius. There are also 2 muscles: tensor tympani muscle, stapedial muscle. Function of the middle ear ossicles: acoustical transformer, to match impedances between fluid air and fluid ‘water’, The chain of bones does this by leverage and by areal ratio. Sound perilymph of cochlea. collected over a (larger) eardrum area and ‘concentrated’ on the (smaller) oval window at the stapedius footplate. Eardrum to stapedius footplate has an area ratio of 21 to 1 [in humans]. Function of the stapedius and tensor tympani muscles is to protect against sounds damagingly intense to the cochlea. The contracting stapedius pulls on the stapes and rotates it so that the large amplitudes carried to it by the malleus and incus are “harmlessly expended”. This protection is of special importance to bats because of the necessary intensity of their outgoing sounds and the faintness of the echoes. The bat needs a very sensitive ear while making a very intense cry. The cochlea is a spiral of perilymph, getting smaller toward its apex, coiled upon itself within the skull. The stapes inserts into an oval window pushing inward on the perilymph. A round window is also necessary to allow for perilymph displacement because of the high bulk modulus of the cochlear fluid. The round window acts as a “pressure relief point”. When the stapedius pushes in on the oval window the round window membrane bulges out. The cochlear canals and the basilar and tectorial membranes within, gradually taper – their size changes. The mechanoreceptor sensory cells (hair cells) sit on the basilar membrane, their ‘cilia’ embedded in the tectorial membrane above. Like the sensory cells of the locust ear, mammalian hair cells discriminate sound frequencies. They do this based on where they are located along the taper of the cochlea. They respond to travelling waves of the basilar membrane that peak at certain ‘places’. Why is the cochlea tapered tonotopically? Why is the crista acustica of katydids likewise tapered tonotopically? Imagine it as it isn’t: the coiled cochlea of a constant diameter throughout. This would prevent its function as a frequency analyser. The taper and its relation to changing wavelengths of different sound frequencies is the basis of frequency discrimination. A remarkable example of convergent evolution between katydids and mammals has been discovered recently. Katydids turn out to have a fluid-filled acoustic vesicle as part of their ear (not previously known). Both mammals and katydids convert sound waves from air into water for sensory analysis – for transduction into neural impulses Montealegre-Z F. et al. 2012. Convergent evolution between insect and mammalian audition. Science 338: 968- Sound is captured by an eardrum, impedance matching occurs in a ‘middle ear’ and then tonotopic frequency analysis takes place in the cochlea of mammals and in the crista acustica of katydids Impedance matching is required to bring fluctuating forces into the fluid Sensory processing: transduction of pressure into neuron depolarizations • Organs called ears are mechanical transducers and their essence is a tympanum or eardrum which tracks the pressure [or displacement] changes that associate with sound travelling through [the fluid] air. • Insects have trachea, air-filled tubes coursing through their body to convey gases. The tracheal system plays an important part in the workings of ears. To ‘collect’ pressure changes requires a thin membrane of cuticle and this must be free to move readily – it cannot be damped by body fluids. So we have a tympanum backed by a tracheal air sac. • The ear of insects is typically a pressure difference ear in that there are two routes to the eardrum: internal and external. The movement of the eardrum is thus a compounded effect of two path-lengths which may be different. • The moving membrane has special cells linked to it that perform the actual transduction: converting pressure forces into depolarizing membranes (the ‘information currency’ of the nervous system. What is an ear and how does a locust discriminate sound frequencies? Ears as elaborate organs are typically bilateral, a right and a left. In the locust each is situated within a recess in the first abdominal segment and sound has access to the rear of both, because they touch internally via air sacs; thus they are ‘pressure difference ears’ meaning the activity of each eardrum is a function of sound reaching both front and back of the tympanum. The plane of the tympanum is angled to face backward slightly. The auditory ganglion of each ear is visible through the transparent tympanum, its nerve running anteromedially to join the metathoracic ganglion. Also visible on and through the tympanum are dark brown chitinous sclerites (e.g., pyriform vesicle, folded body, styliform body, elevated process) that lie on top of the tympanum. At one time it was disputed whether insects could discriminate frequency, indeed whether they even had airborne hearing capacity; insect ‘baloonists’ experiments involving interspersed calls established otherwise. First the anatomy using an anchient but accurate note (it will bear magnification) offered as of historical interest. The tympanum (ear drum) is a very-much thinned region of the cuticle with a ganglion sitting more or less in the middle. Behind the tympanum, applied overtop of ganglion and acoustic nerve is a tracheal sac. Backing the membrane with air is an important adaptation: if the tympanum were backed by the haemolymph of the circulatory system the tympanum’s movements would be significantly damped by the blood and it would not respond with sensitivity to the airborne sound. Each chordotonal sensillum has at its centre a neurosensory cell served by accessory cell types; 60-80 sensilla occur in four groups (a-d). The nerve cell dendrite ends in a scolopale (‘cilium’) that transduces the motions of e.g., the pyriform vesicle or other cuticular eardrum parts. Impinging sound sets the tympanum in motion and the sclerites and the ganglion move relative to each other creating a shear force at the scolopale and then an action potential in the axon which runs into the CNS. The cell’s position on the eardrum, its mechanical linkage, and the behaviour of the eardrum itself, codes for particular frequencies. Listening to 3-kHz, tympanal action moves the whole ganglion and the pyriform vesicle (pv) into the same motion; so both ends, K1 and pv, fusiform body move together. But hit with a pyriform higher sound vesicle frequency of 10 kHz the relative motions of ganglion (K1) vs pv become quite different: so the fusiform body is shaken and jolted, leading to many firings of the Stephen R.O., Bennet-Clark H.C. 1982. The anatomical and mechanical chordotonal basis of stimulation and frequency analysis in the locust ear. J. exp. neurosensory cells Biol. 99: 279-314. within. James F.C. Windmill, Martin C. Gopfert and Daniel Robert 2004. Tympanal travelling waves in migratory locusts Journal of experimental Biology 208: 157168. Scanning laser vibrometry used to investigate the movements of the eardrum when stimulated by different frequencies. Frequency analysis in the locust involves a “travelling wave that funnels mechanical energy to specific tympanal locations, where distinct mechanoreceptor neurones project”. “For each frequency the tympanal deflections do not stay in position, but travel across the tympanum from posterior to anterior... At 3.3 kHz the wave travels across the thin membrane, moving towards a focus point located at the folded body...” Travelling waves vs standing waves eardrum movement when subjected to four different frequencies; scanning laser videos show the complex movement of different regions; profiles: red is outward movement of the tympanum and green is inward movement Summary Windmill et al., concluded: 1.Thin and thick parts of the tympanum membrane are distinct mechanical entities 2.The vibration patterns varied across the entire tympanal membrane in a frequency specific manner 3. Distinct tympanal areas underwent maximal vibrations for a specific frequency and were topographically linked to the attachment locations of mechanoreceptor cell clusters (relay frequency specific information) 4.No support for standing wave. Rather data supports a travelling wavebecause the maximum deflections on the thin membrane moved across the surface area (propagating through) whereas a standing wave would not