EAR
The ear is an organ of the body that is used for hearing and balance.
It is connected to the brain by the auditory nerve and is composed of
three divisions, the external ear, the middle ear, and the inner ear.
The greater part of which is enclosed within the temporal bone.
The ear is looked upon as a miniature receiver, amplifier and
signal-processing system. The structure of the outer ear catching sound
waves as they move into the external auditory canal. The sound waves
then hit the eardrum and the pressure of the air causes the drum to
vibrate back and forth. When the eardrum vibrates its neighbour the
malleus then vibrates too. The vibrations are then transmitted from the
malleus to the incus and then to the stapes. Together the three bones
increase the pressure which in turn pushes the membrane of the oval
window in and out. This movement sets up fluid pressure waves in the
perilymph of the cochlea. The bulging of the oval window then pushes on
the perilymph of the scala vestibuli. From here the pressure waves are
transmitted from the scala vestibuli to the scala tympani and then
eventually finds its way to the round window. This causes the round
window to bulge outward into the middle ear. The scala vestibuli and
scala tympani walls are now deformed with the pressure waves and the
vestibular membrane is also pushed back and forth creating pressure
waves in the endolymph inside the cochlear duct. These waves then
causes the membrane to vibrate, which in turn cause the hairs cells of
the spiral organ to move against the tectorial membrane. The bending of
the stereo cilia produces receptor potentials that in the end lead to
the generation of nerve impulses.
The External or Outer Ear - comprises of the auricle or pinna which is
the fleshy part of the outer ear. It is cup-shaped and collects and
amplifies sound waves which then passes along the ear canal to the ear
drum or tympanic membrane.
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