Hearing (Dr. Gale) Flashcards

1
Q

What is sound ?

A

It is the varying distribution of air molecules in space over time about a fixed point in space.
Molecules affect neighboring molecules giving rise to propagation of the sound via successive compressions and dilatations of air layers.

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2
Q

How is pitch measured ?

What about loudness ?

A

By frequency (in Hz) and loudness by amplitude (usually in mV).

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3
Q

What is the human hearing range and in what interval is the human ear most sensitive ?

A

The human hearing range is 20-20000Hz.

The human ear is most sensitive to 1000-4000Hz.

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4
Q

What is sound pressure level ?

A

Sound pressure level = 20log(Pt/Pr) dB
Pt = test pressure
Pr = reference pressure = 20μPa = threshold (just audible) sound pressure)

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5
Q

How does sounds pressure level vary w/ respect to Pt ?

A

For every time Pt=10Pr, sound pressure level increase by 20.

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6
Q

What is the sounds pressure of rustling leaves ?
A normal converstation ?
A loud rock group ?

A

Rustling leaves = 25dB
Normal conversation = 70dB
Loud rock group = 130dB

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7
Q

What are the three main divisions of the ear ?

A

The outer ear = pina + auditory canal
The middle ear = tympanic membrane (or eardrum), ossicles, middle ear muscles + eustachian tube
Inner ear = vestibular labyrinth, oval window, cochlea + auditory vestibular nerve

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8
Q

What is the role of the outer ear ?

A

It gathers the sound and thus transforms the sounds pressure at the tympanic membrane, amplifies it (by 10-15dB for 1.5-7Hz) and filters it, thus providing aid in sound localization.

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9
Q

What are the 3 ossicles ?

A

The malleus, incus and stapes.

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10
Q

What are the ossicles’ roles ?

How is this done and what is the system’s efficiency ?

A

Lever action and pressure amplification.
The difference in area between the tympanic membrane and the oval window compensates for impedance mismatch between air and cochlear fluid.
This provides up to 30dB increase in sound at 2.5kHz.

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11
Q

How can the ossicles prevent ear damage ?

A

By reflex contraction, a mechanism that reduces ossicle mvnt. This only works however when sounds get progressively louder and will not help against an abrupt loud noise e.g. car honk

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12
Q

How do we call middle ear damage compared to inner ear damage ?

A

Middle ear damage is termed conductive deafness whereas inner ear damage is termed nerve deafness.

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13
Q

Describe the basic anatomy of the cochlea.

A

The cochlea is a coiled structure. In humans, it is 1cm wide, 5cm high and if uncoiled would measure about 3.5cm. It connects to the stapes at the oval window.

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14
Q

What are the 3 compartments (or scalae) of the cochlea ?

A
  • a basilar membrane (BM) that runs along its full length
  • an oval window: when the footplate vibrates, the cochlear fluid is set into motion
  • a round window - fcts as the pressure relief port for the fluid set into motion initially by the mvnt of the stapes in the oval window
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15
Q

What does the cochlea do ?

A

It has 3 main fcts: it splits complex sounds (like speech) into simple components, it amplifies the signal and it converts or traduces mechanical vibrations into APs i.e. sensory transduction

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16
Q

How does the cochlea separate frequencies ?

A

The BM w/in the cochlea is “tuned”: it goes from narrow, thick and stiff at the base to wider, thiner more flexible at the apex (the “center” of the coil).
Thus, frequencies around 20kHz are detected at the base and frequencies around 20Hz are detected at the apex.

17
Q

What is the Traveling Wave and who discovered it ?

A

The stapes vibration displaces he cochlear fluids and causes the BM to vibrate up and down. This was discovered by George von Békésy, for which he won the Nobel Prize in medicine or physiology in 1961. (“for his discoveries of the physical mechanism of stimulation within the cochlea”).

18
Q

Where are the sensory hair cells situated w/in the cochlea ?

A

In the organ of Corti.

19
Q

Consider a horizontal (or axial) cross section of the cochlea.
What are the distinct regions you can observe ?

A

The scala vestibuli and scala tympani, contaning the perilymph, the scala media, containing the endolymph, as well as the tectorial membrane and the organ of Corti (thus the HCs).
The BM separates the scala media from the scale tympani, and Reissner’s membrane separates the scale vestibuli form the scala media.

20
Q

How many Auditory Nerve Fibres (ANFs) are there in humans ?

What types are they ?

A

About 30 000.
95% of these are type I, myelinated, synapse w/ IHCs, up to 20 different afferents per IHC, 1 IHC per afferent
5% are type II, unmyelinated, synapse w/ OHCs, 1 afferent for 5-100 OHCs
The cell bodies of all these neurons are in the spiral ganglion

21
Q

Are there only sensory fibres in the inner ear ?

A

No, there are also efferent fibres that synapses w/ OHCs and w/ afferent fibre terminals.

22
Q

How many IHCs and OHCs are there in the human cochlea ?

A

About 3500 IHCs and 12000 OHCs.

23
Q

What is Place Coding ?

A

This principle is based on the fact that there is a place on the BM at which each freq is processed. IHCs receptor potentials are driven by BM mvnts, and type I ANF are connected to IHCs. Thus, ANF have the same tuning as the part of the BM to which they are connected, which allows the tonotopic map to be carried into the central auditory system.

24
Q

How are the ANF tuned ?

A

ANF are sharply tuned: each fibre shows a preference for a specific frequency (shown by lowering the amplitude of signal and seeing to which freq the ANF responds).

25
Q

What is phase-locking ?

How is this limited ?

A

An ANF can be phase locked w/ the IHC to which it is attached when its APs follow the IHC receptor potentials.
This ability to phase lock starts declining at 2kHz and disappears above 3kHz.

26
Q

How is the central auditory cortex mapped ?

A

Selective innervation patterns of afferent neurons provide “labelled lines” for a tonotopic map in the brain, w/ the part responding to the apex of the cochlea anterior, and the part responding to the base of the cochlea posterior.

27
Q

How does the brain detected increased SPLs ?

A

By the increasing firing rate of IHCs and thus ANFs.

28
Q

How can the cochlea amplify the signal it receives ?

A

OHCs aplify BM vibrations, enhancing sensitivity and freq selectivity
RPs drive length changes in OHCs
This active process is made evident in otoacoustic emmission.