Hearing Flashcards

(45 cards)

1
Q

what is sound

A

created by vibrations which cause the molecules in a surrounding medium (air, liquid, solid) to also vibrate, resulting in pressure changes in that medium

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2
Q

basic sounds can be generally defined by a _____ ____

A

sine wave

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3
Q

sound requires ______ to vibrate in order to travel

A

molecules

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4
Q

what medium does sounds flow through the fastest?

A

solid

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5
Q

loudness is defined as (2 interchangeable terms)

A

amplitude or intensity

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6
Q

amplitude/intensity

A

the magnitude of displacement of a sounds pressure wave

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7
Q

frequency changes, the number of times the sound cycle repeats, are perceived as _____

A

pitch

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8
Q

pitch is measured in ____; how many of these per cycle?

A

hertz; 1

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9
Q

amplitude is measured in ____

A

decibels - changes in pressure ratios

distance from x axis to top of sine wave (ex. bigger wave = larger distance = louder sound)

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10
Q

the upper limit of the loudness threshold is actually ____

A

pain

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11
Q

our pitch threshold declines with ___

A

age

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12
Q

a simple sine wave is referred to as a ___ ____ (define)

A

pure tone; defined by a single frequency

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13
Q

what is the name of a display of a spectrum of energy at each frequency

A

fourier analysis

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14
Q

fundamental frequency

A

how you’re breaking down the sine waves is based off of the lowest frequency wave

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15
Q

timbre

A

adding harmonic frequencies in background

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16
Q

how do we detect sound?

A

with shifts in molecules

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17
Q

pinna

A

outer ear

evolved to help collect sound from the world, works to funnel sound into your ear canal

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18
Q

another name for ear drum and what does it do

A

tympanic membrane; vibrates in response to sounds

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19
Q

the middle ear consists of 3 tiny bones, called (and define)

A

ossicles; function to amplify and transmit sound to inner ear

20
Q

what are three things that make us the ossicles

A

malleus
- “hammer”; largest and one that receives vibrations from the tympanic membrane

incus
- “anvil”; connects the two ossicles

stapes
- “stirrup”; presses against the oval window of the cochlea

21
Q

a ____ shift on one side of the lever can create a ____ shift further down

A

small; larger

22
Q

tensor tympani and stapedius muscles are important for …

A

dealing with loud noises

can tense to decrease ossicle vibrations, muffle sounds, and protect the inner ear

23
Q

where does transduction happen in the ear

24
Q

the inner ear can be compared to the ____ of the eye

25
cochlea (snail)
the coiled structure of the inner ear has three fluid filled canals
26
vestibular canal
receives information, extends from oval window at base of cochlea to helicotrema (center of spiral) at the apex canal closest to ossicles and through which pressure waves move first
27
tympanic canal
extends from the helicotrema at the apex to the round window at the base of the cohclea
28
middle canal
sandwiched between the vestibular and tympanic canals and contains the cochlear partition
29
what 2 membranes separate the canals and what canals do they separate in particular?
reissner's membrane - separate vestibular and middle canals basilar membrane - a plate of fibers that form the cochlear partition and separates the middle and tympanic canals
30
what happens to the fluid in the canals when vibrations are transmitted?
they membrane of the oval window is pushed and pulled which shifts the fluid
31
where does excess pressure go in the ear?
out through the round window
32
the organ of corti
a structure on the basilar membrane that is composed of hair cells and dendrites of the auditory nerve fibers where transduction takes place
33
stereocilia
supported by the hair cells transduce the mechanical movement of sound in the cochlea into electrochemical neural signaling both afferent (brain receives info) and efferent (receive info from brain)
34
where is the stereocilia located?
on the basilar membrane
35
stereocilia cause changes in _____ _____ as they are flexed
graded potentials
36
_________ from bending of the stereocilia results in neurotransmitter release to auditory nerve
depolarization
37
_____ sounds cause more forceful mechanical shifts, thus the more forceful shearing across the _____ __ _____
louder; organ of corti
38
place coding
cochlea is set up to code different frequencies across different parts of its coiled space
39
what type of frequency is received further down the cochlea? what about at the base/beginning?
lower frequencies; higher frequencies
40
inner hair cells vs. outer hair cells
inner - afferent, transduce sound to send to the brain outer - efferent, receive information from the brain and provide feedback to the inner ear - refine sensitivity - adjust the tension on the membrane physically
41
frequency selectivity
auditory nerves code for particular frequencies based on position along cochlea
42
2 other influences of selectivity
two-tone suppression - two tones presented at the same time result in decrease in firing rate of an auditory nerve fiber rate saturation - loud sounds often muddy frequencies
43
isointensity curve
frequency vs firing rate plotted on axes and individual lines are single intensities the louder the sound the smoother the curve
44
rate-intensity function
reveals that some fibers require higher-intensity sounds before they fire (low-spontaneous/selectivity) and other require less (high spontaneous)
45
phase locking
where a single neuron fires at a distinct point along a cycle of a given frequency sound wave