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Transcript
Ears and Hearing
You have an ear on each side of your head. Your ears let
you hear sounds. You can hear music and other nice
sounds. You can hear sirens and other warning sounds.
Your ears do something else very important. They help
you keep your balance. You can walk and ride a bike
without falling over because of your ears.
HOW DOES SOUND WORK?
Anything that moves back and forth makes sound. Moving back
and forth is called vibrating. Pluck a guitar string and watch it
vibrate back and forth. The vibrations make sound waves.
Sound waves are a lot like water waves. If you throw a pebble in
a lake or pond, you can see the waves move out in circles. Sound
waves move out in circles from whatever is vibrating.
Most sound waves you hear travel through air. Sound waves
can also travel through water and even through solid things. You
can hear your own voice because your solid skull bones vibrate.
Your ears pick up the sound waves. Your ear has three main
parts that let you hear. The parts are called the outer ear, middle
ear, and inner ear.
THE OUTER EAR
Your outer ear is the part that sticks out on the side of your
head. The outer ear collects sound waves. The sound waves
travel down a tube to your eardrum. Your eardrum is a thin layer
that separates the outer ear from the middle ear. The sound
waves make your eardrum vibrate.
THE MIDDLE EAR
Your middle ear is inside your head on the other side of your
eardrum. Your middle ear has three tiny bones. Your vibrating
eardrum makes the bones move. The bones carry the vibrations
to your inner ear.
Your middle ear is filled with air. A tube connects your middle
ear with your nose and throat. This tube helps keep too much air
from building up inside your ear. The tube makes your ears pop
in an elevator or airplane.
THE INNER EAR
Your inner ear has many parts and tubes that twist and turn. A
part called the cochlea is very important for hearing. The cochlea
looks like a snail shell. It is filled with fluid and tiny hairs. The
moving bones in your middle ear make the fluid and tiny hairs in
the cochlea move.
The tiny hairs link to nerves. The nerves carry signals to your
brain. Your brain tells you what the sound is. It tells whether you
are hearing a train whistle or a bird singing.
HOW DO EARS HELP WITH BALANCE?
Your sense of balance comes partly from your inner ear. Fluid,
tiny hairs, and small grains of minerals in your inner ear work
together to tell your brain where your head is. They tell your
brain if your head is straight up-and-down or sideways. This
helps your brain tell your muscles how to move to keep your
balance.
Problems with the inner ear can cause dizziness. Motion
sickness, such as seasickness or carsickness, comes from your
inner ear. When big waves shake you up, the liquid inside your
inner ear sloshes around. That can make you feel sick.
WHAT CAUSES HEARING PROBLEMS?
Sometimes people are born with hearing problems. Injuries and
infections can also cause hearing problems. People with hearing
problems hear less well than others. People with very serious
problems cannot hear any sounds. They are totally deaf (unable
to hear).
Hearing problems can come from injured eardrums. Infections
or other diseases can damage parts of the ear. Cancer can
damage nerves. Children can be born with a missing or damaged
cochlea or other ear parts. Some people slowly lose their hearing
as they get older. Loud music and other loud noises can also
cause hearing loss.
Doctors treat ear infections with medicines or use tubes to drain
the ear. Ear doctors can give some people hearing aids, small
machines that make sounds louder. They can give people with
very serious hearing loss a cochlear implant. The implant is a
tiny artificial cochlea that changes sound waves to signals. The
signals are fed to the nerves that lead to the brain.
Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2007. © 1993-2006 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.