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The Ear - Pathway of Hearing Auditory Phonetics How to Handle Speech UBielefeld What is Sound? “ ... a sound is any disturbance of air that could cause a displacement of the eardrum which, after transmission by the bone chain, could affect the liquid in the inner ear in such a way that the auditory nerves are stimulated.” (Ladefoged, Elements of Acoustic Phonetics, pp.2-3) How Sound Travels “The source of sound causes movements of the air particles in its immediate neighborhood; these movements cause disturbances in the air a little farther away from the source; these air particles in their turn affect their neighbors which are still farther away from the source; and so the disturbance spreads outward.” (Ladefoged, ibid, p.3) Just Another Sound: The Human Voice • voice: fluctuations of air pressure > caused by rapid opening and closing of vocal folds • pressure rises to a maximum, then falls steadily to a minimum before rising again to repeat the cycle, all within a small fraction of a second Varying Air Pressure • maxima: peaks above 0 • minima: valleys below 0 • peaks of air pressure <=> air particles close together • moments of low pressure <=> air particles furthest apart THINK: What about sound in a vacuum? Hearing vs. Perception • ear (peripheral auditory organ): hearing > sound reception & sound transformation • auditory organ (includes central nervous system; central auditory organ): perception > interpretation of semantic contents Our Auditory Field Our Auditory Field http://home.schule.at/teaching/Hoeren_und_Hoerprobleme/vorgang/hoerfeld.htm The Ear • outer ear – protection, – collection of sound • middle ear – transmission of mechanic vibrations • inner ear – transformation of vibrations into neural impulses The Ear outer ear inner ear middle ear The Ear Cont‘d. The Path of Sound • external canal • vibrates eardrum • vibration moves through ossicles – mallet (malleus), anvil (incus), stirrup (stapes) • stapes vibrates oval window of cochlea • creates pressure wave in the fluid inside The Outer Ear • Pinna / auricle: – protects the entrance to the ear canal – contributes to our ability to locate sounds, esp. at higher frequencies • Meatus/outer ear canal: – pathway for the acoustic signal – protection of the inner ear – tube resonator, i.e. favors transmission of high-frequency sounds (2000-4000 Hz) and generally between 500 and 4000 Hz The Middle Ear The Middle Ear Cont‘d • Eardrum: – is deflected by air pressure variations (= sound) – converts air pressure variations into mechanical movement – transmits this movement to the auditory ossicles The Middle Ear Cont‘d auditory ossicles: mallet, anvil, stirrup: – pick up the mechanical movement of the eardrum and convey it to the inner ear/oval window – transformation of air pressure variation into equivalent mechanical movements – contraction between anvil and stirrup can reduce amplitude (protection for inner ear) The Middle Ear Cont‘d • Eustachian tube: – narrow tube connecting pharynx and middle ear – equalizes air pressure differences between outer and middle ear • oval window: – interface between middle and inner ear – transmits mechanical movement The Inner Ear • cochlea: – coil-like structure terminating in a window with a flexible membrane at each end – internally divided by two membranes, filled with cochlear fluid – converts mechanical movements into neural signals The Inner Ear Cont‘d Cochlea The Inner Ear Cont‘d • basilar membrane: – stiffer at one end than at the other > sensitive to particular frequencies at particular points because of the different resonance which is due to different stiffness • high frequencies picked up at the stiff end • lower frequencies at the more flexible end > conducts spectral analysis of incoming sound (see animation later!) The Inner Ear Cont‘d cross section of one single turn of the cochlea (no 5. = basilar membrane) The Inner Ear Cont‘d • Organ of Corti: – attached along the basilar membrane – hair cells which get moved and excited – responsible to transform membrane displacement into neural signals 1. inner hair cells 2. outer hair cells 3. tunnel of Corti 4. basilar membrane The Inner Ear Cont‘d Hair Cells • about 16,000 in each cochlea • located on the basilar membrane • do not regenerate • inner (~ 3,500) hair cells vs. outer hair cells (~ 20,000) • stimulated by bending of the basilar membrane (length a wave travels on the basilar membrane depends on frequency > first frequency (spectral) analysis) • amplitude: lower & medium amplitudes affect outer hair cells, higher amplitudes affect inner hair cells Anatomy of the Cochlea Animated http://www.hhmi.org/biointeractive/animations/c ochlea/coc_frames.htm The Auditory Nerve • Auditory nerve: – picks up the neural signals from the organ of Corti – sends signals to the brain where the information is processed and interpreted > analytical effects of the human auditory system The End