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How
Do We Hear?
Hearing is a series of events in which sound waves in
the air produce electrical signals and cause nerve impulses
to be sent to the brain where they are interpreted as
sound. The ear has three main parts: the outer, middle
and inner ear. Sound waves enter through the outer ear
and reach the middle ear where they cause the eardrum
to vibrate.
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The vibrations
are transmitted through three tiny bones in the middle
ear, called the ossicles. These three bones are named
the malleus, incus and stapes (and are also known as
the hammer, anvil and stirrup). The eardrum and ossicles
amplify the vibrations and carry them to the inner ear.
The stirrup transmits the amplified vibrations through
the oval window and into the fluid that fills the inner
ear. The vibrations move through fluid in the snail-shaped
hearing part of the inner ear (cochlea) that contains
the hair cells. The fluid in the cochlea moves the top
portion of the hair cells which initiates the changes
that lead to the production of the nerve impulses. These
nerve impulses are carried to the brain where they are
interpreted as sound. Different sounds move to the population
of hair cells in different ways, thus allowing the brain
to distinguish among various sounds.
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