Class 6
Class 6
The ear is an engineering marvel because its sensory receptors can transduce sound vibrations with amplitudes as
small as the diameter of a gold atom (0.3 nm) into electrical signals.
The signals are 1000 times faster than photoreceptors can respond to light.
The auricle is a flap of elastic cartilage shaped like the flared end of a trumpet and covered by
skin.
The rim of the auricle is helix; the inferior portion is the lobule. Ligaments and muscles attach the
auricle to the head.
The external auditory canal is a curved tube that extends upto the eardrum. The eardrum is a
thin partition between the external canal and the middle ear.
The external canal contains a few hairs and specialized sweat glands (ceruminous glands) that
secrete earwax or cerumen.
Muscles/ligaments limits
movements of ossicles to
protect inner ear from loud
noises. Smallest skeletal muscle in human body???
Middle Ear – how it works …
Middle ear
Incus works as
Malleus
an
amplifier in
two ways
Stapes
Configuration
Area difference
of ossicles
(55 to 3.2 sq mm)
(Length of
malleus and
incus)
The Inner ear is also called the labyrinth. Inner ear
Bony labyrinth (BL) and membranous
labyrinth (ML).
2. When sound waves strike the eardrum, it vibrates back and forth.
3. The malleus vibrates along with the eardrum, transmitting it further to the incus and then to the stapes.
4. The stapes moves back and forth and makes the oval window vibrate at an intensity ~22 times more than the eardrum.
5. This sets up fluid pressure waves in the perilymph of cochlea. As the oval window bulges inward, it pushes on the perilymph of scala vestibuli.
6. Pressure waves are further transmitted to scala tympani and eventually to the round window, making it to bulge outward into the middle ear.
7. Pressure waves pushes the vestibular membrane and then move into the endolymph of the cochlear duct.
8. The pressure in the endolymph causes the basilar membrane to vibrate. Hair cells are perturbed and electrical signal is generated from mechanical vibrations.
9. Sound waves of various frequencies cause certain regions of the basilar membrane to vibrate more intensely than other regions. Each segment of this membrane is
‘tuned’ for a particular pitch.