Hearing Flashcards

1
Q

What are the parts of the outer ear

A

pinna, external auditory meatus (aka ear canal)

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2
Q

What are the parts of the middle ear

A

tympanic membrane, ossicles, eustachian tube

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3
Q

What is the order of the ossicles

A

malleus, incus, stapes

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4
Q

What are the parts of the inner ear

A

vestibular and cochlea

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5
Q

What are the 3 sections of the cochlea

A

scala vestibuli, scala media (cochlear duct), scala tympani

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6
Q

Sound waves are characterized by…

A

frequency and intensity (pitch and loudness)

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7
Q

The oval window and the round window…

A

separate the fluid-filled inner ear from the air-filled middle ear

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8
Q

the steps of sound transmission

A

the ear cannal collects the sound waves, the sound waves vibrate the tympanic membrane which moves the ossicles, the stapes foot plate moves in and out of the oval window sending the vibrations to the cochlea, when sound energy is transferred to the cochlea the basilar membrane vibrates up and down causing the outer hair cell sterocilia to shear on the tecorial membrane above, this shearing action causes the stereocilia to bend which opens ion gates and leads to chemical changes (nerve impulse travels to auditory nerve)

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9
Q

__________ initates the tympanic reflex

A

loud sounds

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10
Q

tympanic reflex

A

tensor tympani and stapedius muscles contract; sound transmission decreases (protective= prevents strong sound waves from causing excessive stimulation of the auditory receptors)

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11
Q

round window

A

where sound waves exit the cochlea

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12
Q

As sound wave move the fluids in the cochlea…

A

the basilar membrane vibrates and the stereocilia of the hair cells are bended

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13
Q

When the inner hair cell is bent toward the tallest stereocilium, it is

A

depolarized (influx of K-> opens Ca channels -> vesicle release of neurotransmitters)

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14
Q

when the inner hair cell is bent away from the tallest stereocilium it is

A

hyperpolarized ( no K influx-> no activation of calcium channels (no calcium influx)-> no positive ions in cell)

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15
Q

hair cells are in what kind of ionic environment

A

endolymph: high potassium (outside), low sodium

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16
Q

Inner Hair Cells

A

primary sensory receptors

17
Q

Outer Hair Cells

A

shorten when depolarized, increase the amplitude and clarity of sound

18
Q

How are different tones coded by the cochlea?

A

by different regions of the cochlea

19
Q

What part of the cochlea responses to low pitch?

A

near distal end

20
Q

What part of the cochlea responses to high pitch

A

near the round window

21
Q

Detection of the frequency of a sound above 5kHz is based on

A

the location along the cochlea of the most intensely stimulated hair cells

22
Q

For a frequency below 2000 Hz how is frequency detected

A

both firing pattern of CN8 and the region of hair cell activation can give the brain ideas about the pitch

23
Q

The frequency of the action potential is proportional to

A

the loudness of the sound

24
Q

Major Auditory Pathways (in order)

A

cochlear ganglia-> dorsal and vental cochlear nuclei ->superior olive -> inferior colliculi -> medial geniculate body (thalamus) -> primary auditory cortex

25
Q

dorsal and ventral cochlear nuclei

A

2nd order neurons respond from 1 ear (same side)

26
Q

superior olive

A

respond from both ears (where info crosses)

27
Q

inferior colliculi

A

centers of auditory reflexes

28
Q

primary auditory cortex

A

tonotropic, very plastic

29
Q

Superior Olive

A

sound localization: loudness difference (important for freq about 3000 Hz); detectable time difference (most important for frequencies below 3000 Hz)

30
Q

Conductive deafness

A

impared sound transmission external or middle ear; impairs all sound frequencies

31
Q

Sensorineural deafness

A

transmission of nerve impulses is impaired: loss of hair cells; impairs ability to hear some pitches more than others

32
Q

function of the pinna

A

protection; helps detect where sounds are coming from

33
Q

sound waves vibrate the eardrum which vibrates the 1, 2, 3. The foot plate moves in and out of the 4 and transfers energy to the 5

A

malleus, incus, stapes, oval window, endolymph cochlea

34
Q

Along the basilar membrane there are 2 types of sensory cells:

A

the outer and inner hair cells

35
Q

How are hair cells arranged

A

by the frequency they detect

36
Q

Where is the organ of corti located

A

cochlear duct or the scala media

37
Q

The ________ is filled with a fluid with an abnormally high K+

A

cochlear duct or the scala media