Lecture 12 Flashcards
Sound waves
Air condenses and rarefys
goas at 700mph
Amplitude = how loud
hz = pitch
human ears 20-20000 hz
Timbre
Complexity of sound (like what instrument)
Anatomy of ear
(1) sound funneled into pinnae (outer ear)
(2) sound coming down the ear canal vibrates the tympanic membrane
(3) Middle ear is comprised of 3 ossicles
Move the membrane behind the oval window
Go to cochlea
Cochlea/basilar membrane
water runs around a central membrane in
Where it bends membrane = sound perception
Basilar membrane encodes high frequency notes at the beginning near the oval window and low frequency notes at the end
Cochlea
Scala vestibuli (up) S Scala tympani (below Scala media has organ of corti
Organ of corti
basilar membrane
Tectoral membrane
Hair cells
Hair cells (inner and outer)
1:3 Inner:outer hair cells
Inner transduces signal
Outer, joint to both membranes and can contract therefore alters the shape of membranes and helps make it sensitive
No functional inner hair cells = totally deaf
No outer hair cells can hear but not well
Hair cell cilia
On ends of inner hair cells and not joined to top membrane
Can move as water moves them
All joined together by tip links to insertional plaques
Mechanically pulls open ion channels when hair moved apart
Loud noise
Easily break tip links
These grow back but takes a while
Probably protective as too much glutamate secretion causes excitotoxicity
When too much activity over a while = hair cells over stimulate nerve cells = excitotoxicity = cell death and permeant hearing loss
20% of 20 year olds have this
Also age related hearing loss
Perception of pitch
Different frequencies produce maximal stimulation of hair cells at different points on the basilar membrane
Place coding
At very low frequencies, this does not work because the membrane bends over a large area so it switches to rate coding. How much NT is transmitted by low frequency hair cells
Hair cell sensitivity
Respond best to a specific frequency
Will still respond to others but only if loud enough
High volumes cause multiple cells to fire but one will fire the most. This is the fundamental frequency and determines the pitch of the could we perceive. The number of cells that fire codes for the volume we perceive.
Overtones
Natural sounds are composed of a fundamental frequency and a collection of overtones which are integer multiples of the fundamental frequency
Timbre
The lowest and most intense frequency of a sound is the fundamental frequency
Sounds basic pitch is perceived from this
Overtones are sound frequencies that occur at multiples of the same fundamental frequency
Timbre of sound is the fundamental frequency and overtones mixed. Different instruments produce different overtones and thus timbres at the same notes. We analyze this over time and learn to interpret them as different,
Cochlear implant
Often hair cells don’t work due to a defect in proteins
Person borne deaf
But the nerve still works
Implant 2024 electrodes in the cochlea
frequency patterns 250-6500hzHuman voice is 165-255 but implants cannot do this
By using overtones, can distinguish human voices
Not very good. Music is not pleasant. Very good overall
Perception of spatial location (innate - 2 things)
Under 800Hz have half wavelengths larger than dimension of head so can note the different times it reaches the ear
High f - note the difference in loudness between the ears cos high f sounds are dampened as they pass through skull