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HEARING. Audition  What is Audition?  Hearing  What sounds do we hear the best?  Sounds with the frequencies in the range corresponding to the human.

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Presentation on theme: "HEARING. Audition  What is Audition?  Hearing  What sounds do we hear the best?  Sounds with the frequencies in the range corresponding to the human."— Presentation transcript:

1 HEARING

2 Audition  What is Audition?  Hearing  What sounds do we hear the best?  Sounds with the frequencies in the range corresponding to the human voice.

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4 How Sounds Travel to the Ear  A sound Stimulus Energy  Molecules of Air bump into the next molecules waves of compressed & expanded air  Ears detect the air pressure change  The vibrations are felt  Ears transform the vibrating air nerve impulses

5 Sound Waves  Amplitude  Strength of the sound waves  Loudness  Frequency  The number of wavelength that pass a point in a given time which determines the pitch  Pitch  A tone’s experienced high or lowness  Decibels  How sounds are measured  The absolute threshold for hearing is arbitrarily

6 Structure of the Ear The ear is divided into the outer, middle & inner ear.

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8 Outer Ear  Auditory Canal #7  Channel that sounds  Waves first pass through

9 Eardrum #8 A tight membrane that vibrates with the waves

10 Middle Ear Bones of the middle ear = the Hammer #1, Anvil #2, Stirrup #3 which vibrate with the eardrum.

11 Semicircular Canals #4

12 Inner Ear

13 Oval window = where the stirrup connects to the cochlea. #9

14 Cochlea = a coiled, bony, fluid-filled tube in the inner ear through which sound waves trigger nerve impulses. #6

15 Perceiving Loudness  Basilar membrane’s hair cells

16 Cochlea and Loud Sounds

17 Auditory nerve = nerve which sends the auditory message to the brain via the thalamus. #5

18 Eustachian Tube #11  The eustachian tube connects the middle ear to the throat.  Its purpose is to equalize middle ear pressure with environmental pressure. When your ear "pops" on a high-speed elevator or in an airplane, the reason is that the eustachian tube has opened and equalized pressure.

19 Neural Impulse to the Brain

20 Place Theory  The theory that links the pitch we hear with the place where the cochlea’s membrane is stimulated.

21 Frequency Theory  The theory that the rate of nerve impulses traveling up the auditory nerve matches the frequency of a tone, thus enabling us to sense its pitch.

22 Hearing Loss  Conduction Hearing Loss Hearing loss caused by damage to the mechanical system that conducts sound waves to the cochlea. Problems with the eardrum or three bones of the middle ear.  Sensorineural Hearing Loss Hearing loss caused by damage to the cochlea’s receptor cells or to the auditory nerves; also called nerve deafness.


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