L12 - Physiology of the Ear Flashcards
1
Q
What are pinnae? (outside of ear)
A
- Help to pick up sound over large area and concentrate over the eardrum, can be moved around
- Can also be stationary, those are not horn shaped
- Increase sound level and sensitivity in hearing in humans
- Mammals have pinnae = good at high frequency hearing and can focus sound, others do not and so have a smaller range and can’t cope with longer wavelengths
2
Q
Why are owls different from other birds?
A
Have a structure analogous to pinnae as eyes have sound reflection, makes them a bigger head
3
Q
What is the middle ear? (ossicles)
A
- Cochlea (inner ear) is full of fluid and can detect vibration
- Sound must get from outside and into the fluid and sound is reflected from water extremely
- Made of three bones: mechanical system and take weak waves in the air and turn them into forceful waves to enter the fluid
- Small area making small movements and large area making large movements to increase force conducts airbourne sound into cochlear fluid making hearing 30db more sensitive
- Bones are Malleus, Incus and Stapes
- Differs in mammals and birds: birds have one bone
- Evolution of 3-bone middle ear allowed for more hearing range
3
Q
What is the reason for the ear canal?
A
- Protect the eardrum: long tube surrounded by bone
- Has a resonance frequency = makes things less intense at the eardrum
- Responsible for the peak sensitivity in absolute threshold
4
Q
Why are mammals hearing similar but shifted along?
A
- Lowest frequency determines the volume limit
- Highest frequency determined by mass limit (bigger bones if bigger animal)
- Smaller the bones, the higher the frequency you can hear
5
Q
Describe the cochlea:
A
- Cochlea has a lot of turns = in a spiral structure
- Bottom part = scala tympani, middle = scala media, top = scala vestibuli
- Top and bottom are joint together
- Sound will travel in circular pattern all the way up from the bottom to the top, exit through a hole in the top called the helicotrema and back down
- Fluid is not compressible, pressure wave has to go somewhere = membrane called round window opens into middle ear so it can move back and forth to release pressure waves
- As sound moves, it makes the basilar membranes move up and down
- Cell fibres from auditory nerve follow the pattern of the sound in the cochlea = called the spiral ganglia
- High frequencies excite the base and low frequencies excite the apex, the membranes sort the frequencies out, they excite at different places in the cochlea
6
Q
How is the basilar membrane like a harp?
A
- Harp has short light strings at one end and long, heavy ones at the other and results in different notes
- Similarly, the basilar membrane is narrow, light and stiff at the bottom and is wide, heavy and floppy at the top
- If you drop something in the room, harp strings will vibrate in response to the frequency of the drop = same as cochlea = called passive resonance
- Mammals have this change systematically in their basilar membrane
7
Q
What is inside a turn inside the cochlea?
A
- Scala tympani and scala vestibuli are joined and have the perilymph as the liquid (in the lymphatic system)
- Scala media has endolymph as the stria vascularis pumps potassium ions into the ears causing a charge difference (100mv) = feeds nerve fibres to basilar membrane to the organ of Corti
8
Q
What is the organ of Corti?
A
- Have 2 kinds of hair cells: different shapes and are positioned differently, one inner row and then 3 rows of outer hair cells - have hairs (stereocilia) and detect vibrations/movements
- Tectorial Membrane sitting on top: a flap
- Stiff fibres in the middle and tunnel of Corti
- Nerves going to the inner and outer hair cells
- Afferent: extends info from outside to brain
- Efferent: from the brain to periphery
9
Q
How does the Organ of Corti work?
A
- Sound waves travels through the cochlea
- Passes above/below basilar membrane causing it to vibrate
- Oval window = pressure pushed in above basilar membrane, and round window releasing pressure move complementarily to each other (moves up and down)
- Diff places along length of it go up/down depending on frequency
10
Q
What is the effect of basilar membrane motion on the bundles of stereocilia?
A
- Pressure waves come in, they also leave from the other window
- Tectorial membrane has a shearing action compared to the basilar membrane
- This excites a hair cell and they respond electrical and react to dendrites attaches = allows transduction
- Hairs themselves: arranged in short to tall links and tip links each stereocilium in the bundle to the next, they pull open ion channels, allowing K+ into the cell to change voltage and respond = allows auditory to react quickly = dependent on pressure
11
Q
What do OHC do?
A
- Only receive efferent inputs = do not info to brain
- They also move in response to change in voltage = change length depending on voltage
- Second mechanism of tuning in the ear: Outer hair cells that like particular frequencies and change length - push the basilar membrane and make it move more - amplification system
12
Q
How is it an amplification effect?
A
- Sound comes in = basilar membrane moves a bit = inner hair cells change their voltage = excite auditory nerve
- Outer hair cells = change voltage and change length = push basilar membrane and move it more than it would do = more inner hair cell activation
- Outer hair cells allow 60db sensitivity (positive feedback amplification)
13
Q
What does the auditory nerve do?
A
- Has a lot of axons along its length = takes info to the brain
- Basilar membrane analyse sounds into diff frequencies = auditory nerve fibre picks up info about particular frequencies
- In a guinea pig, you can see the range of frequencies and intensities auditory nerve fibres responded to = some nerves are more sensitive to certain frequencies/intensities
- Increase sound level = respond to a wider range of frequencies
14
Q
How is this data collected? (for auditory nerve)
A
- Sweep sound across frequency at diff sound levels and record all spikes that go up auditory nerve fibre
- Low level sound = as it goes up in frequency = narrow range of frequency where nerve fires
- Increase sound level = wider range of frequency where nerve fires