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Download 07.The Ear
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Hearing and Equilibrium The ear is the organ of hearing and equilibrium. It consists of three main regions: 1. outer ear 2. middle ear 3. inner ear Outer Ear Consists of auricle (pinna) and the external acoustic canal. Auricle (pinna) – fleshy part attached to head - acts as a sound collector Helix – rim of the auricle Earlobe – only part of auricle not supported by cartilage External Acoustic (auditory) canal - 2.5 cm long - carries sound to eardrum - lined with hairs and sweat glands that produce ear wax Tympanic membrane – thin, doublelayered membrane (eardrum) - 1 cm diameter - Very sensitive to pain Tympanic cavity – air-filled chamber that contains the auditory ossicles Middle Ear Ossicles – 3 tiny bones that carry sound 1. Malleus – hammer 2. Incus – anvil 3. Stapes – stirrup Auditory Tube – equalizes pressure on both sides of the eardrum Inner Ear Oval window – receives sound waves from stapes Entire structure of the inner ear is called labyrinth. Made of 3 areas: 1. Vestibule – chamber that aids in balance 2. Semicircular canals – canals that also aid in balance 3. Cochlea – shell shaped structure that contains 2 rows of hairs that respond to sound waves. Auditory Nerve – receives impulses generated by inner ear and sends them to temporal lobe of brain Pathway that Sound Travels through Ear Sound Waves pinna auditory canal Tympanum ear ossicles cochlea Auditory nerve temporal lobe Sound Waves and Hearing Sound waves – travel in all directions and are characterized by their frequency and intensity Hearing - Sound waves travel through the external acoustic canal and produce small vibrations of the tympanic membrane. - Vibrations are passed on to the three bones of the middle ear. - The ossicles amplify the vibrations and transmits them to the oval window. - The hairs inside the cochlea convert the waves into electrical impulses that are sent to the brain. Equilibrium Balance involves static equilibrium and dynamic equilibrium. 1. Static equilibrium – head position - Maintained by 2 fluid-filled sacs inside the vestibule (saccule, utricle) - Inside these sacs have cilia that move in the direction of the head. - This information is sent to the brain. Dynamic Equilibrium – body position - maintained by three semi-circular canals - can cause motion sickness - Readings – Pages 445-450