SenSory SyStemS 273
What is the sense of hearing?
- Hearing is the perception of sound waves that are detected by
mechanoreceptors in the ears. - Hair cells in the inner ear are the receptors for sound.
- Hair cells are attached to membranes inside the cochlea.
- Pressure waves generated by sound cause membrane vibrations
that bend hair cells. The bending produces nerve impulses in
neurons of the auditory nerve.
taKe-Home message
which includes hair cells. These cells are the mechanore-
ceptors that serve as the sensory receptors for sound.
Slender projections at the tips of hair cells rest against
an overhanging tectorial (“roof like”) membrane (Figure
14.9.E), which is not a membrane at all but a jellylike struc-
ture. When pressure waves in the cochlear fluid vibrate the
basilar membrane, its movements can press hair cell projec-
tions against the tectorial membrane so that the projections
bend like brush bristles. Affected hair cells release a neu-
rotransmitter. It triggers action potentials in neurons of the
auditory nerve, which carries them to the brain.
Different sound frequencies cause different parts of the
basilar membrane to vibrate—and, accordingly, to bend
different groups of hair cells. Apparently, the total num-
ber of hair cells stimulated in a given region determines
the loudness of a sound. The perceived tone or “pitch”
of a sound depends on the frequency of the vibrations
that excite different groups of hair cells. The higher the
frequency, the higher the pitch.
Eventually, pressure waves moving through the cochlea
push against the round window, a membrane at the far end of
the cochlea. As the round window bulges outward toward
the air-filled middle ear, it serves as a “release valve” for
the force of the waves. Air also moves through an opening
in the middle ear into the eustachian tube. This tube runs
from the middle ear to the throat (pharynx), permitting air
pressure in the middle ear to be equalized with the pres-
sure of outside air. When you change altitude (say, during
a plane trip), this equalizing process makes your ears pop.
Sounds such as amplified music and the thundering of
jet engines are so intense that long-term exposure to them
can permanently damage the inner ear (Section 14.7). Evo-
lution has not equipped hair cells of the human ear to cope
with such extremely loud, modern-day sounds.
Middle ear bones:
stirrup
anvil
hammer
Eardrum
auditory
canal Cochlea
auditory nerve
round
window
oval window
(behind stirrup)
Middle ear
eardrum,
ear bones
vestibular
apparatus,
cochlea
Outer ear
pinna,
auditory
canal
A
B
Inner ear
scala vestibuli
cochlear duct
sensory scala tympani
neurons (to
the auditory
nerve)
organ of Corti
hair cells of organ of Corti
tectorial membrane basilar membrane
oval window scala vestibuli
eardrum
round window
cochlear duct scala tympani
waves
of fluid
pressure
waves
of air
pressure
the cochlea, “uncoiled” for clarity
C
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© Dr. Thomas R. Van DeWater, University of Miami Ear Institute
© Cengage Learning
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