lecture 24 - nervous system 4: hearing & the brain Flashcards
what are attached to the hair cells in the organ of corti?
nerve fibres
what are the 2 types of nerve fires attached to hair fibres?
type 1 - associated with inner hair cells (95%)
• there are a number of type 1 going into each inner hair cell
• carry info to the brain
type 2 - associated with outer hair cells (5%)
• 1 nerve fibre goes to a number of outer hair cells
• spiral up the cochlea and make contact with neighbouring cells
• function is unknown
processing nuclei in the auditory pathway
1) auditory nerve
2) cochlea nucleus - first synapse in the central auditory pathway
3) superior olivary complex - site of interaction of inputs from 2 ears
4) inferior colliculus - midbrain centre where different brainstem pathways converge
5) medial geniculate body - thalamic auditory nucleus
6) auditory cortex - in the temporal lobe of the cerebral cortex
where is the auditory cortex in the human brain?
along the upper bank of superior temporal gyrus
• Heschl’s gyrus
what are the 2 ways to code sound frequency in the brain?
place code
time code
place code
throughout the auditory pathway sound frequency is mapped within the processing centres and on surface of auditory cortex
tonotopic organisation
place code: tonotopic representation of sound frequency
high frequency hair cells up towards the apex and low frequency hair cells down towards the base
the nerve fibre is selective for a particular range of frequencies
nerve fibres terminate in an orderly fashion in the cochlea nucleus
nerve cells show the same frequency selectivity as the nerve fibres
time code
phase-locking
firing of APs in auditory nerve fibres synchronise with peaks of sound waveform
time between APs tells us about the frequency of sound
only occurs for low frequency sounds
what is phase-locking?
synchronisation of AP firing to peaks in waveform of low frequency sounds
how does phase-locking occur?
when a sound is at peak form, there is greater probability for AP than when at the trough
time between AP = a period (t)
frequency = 1/t
how does sound localisation work?
uses place and time code
need to know where the sound is coming from
what are the 2 mechanisms of sound localisation?
1st - recognising here the sound is in vertical plane (below/above or infant/behind)
• depends how waves interact with outer ear
2nd - horizontal plane (left/right)
• differences in timing and intensity of the sound in 2 ears
cues for sound localisation in horizontal plane
sounds in different positions in space lead to timing and intensity differences at the ears as they are not in the same place - separated by the head
this are termed inter-aural
brain detects these differences to localise sound
inter-aural time cues for sound localisation
for all sounds
• differences in sound onset time between the 2 ears
for longer, continuous sounds
• differences in phase of sound between ears
what happens when a low frequency sound comes from 1 side of the head?
the sound reaches the left ear in 1 phase and the the right ear at a different phase
due to the difference in distance the sound has to travel