Title: Audition: Sound, the Ear,
1Audition Sound, the Ear, the BrainPsyc 351
2Functional Utility of Sound
- Carries information helpful for locating where
things are, where you are (outside, in a large
room, on firm ground, etc.) - Carries information good for identification (we
can identify friends from their footfalls) - Travels well in air (not that quickly, and with
echoes and reflections, but overall does well)
3The nature of sound
- Pressure waves compression and rarefaction
- Sine waves
- Three dimensions of sound
- Amplitude
- Frequency
- Phase
- Speed of sound 1100 feet/sec in air (x 5
faster in water)
4Amplitude, Frequency, Phase
5The nature of sound
Pressure wavesSine waves Three dimensions
Amplitude Frequency Phase
6(No Transcript)
7(No Transcript)
8Sounds in the natural environment
9Fourier analysis
Fourier Analysis analyzing complex waves into
simpler components sine waves Fourier
Synthesis the reverse adding sine waves to
create complex waves
10Fourier analysis
11Fourier Synthesis
12Representations amplitude waveforms vs.
spectrographs
13Amplitude The Decibel scale
- A ratio scale
- referenced to the classical threshold of human
hearing, nominally .0002 dynes/cm2 - (Factoid dyne force needed to accelerate 1g
to 1cm/sec in 1 sec - A logarithmic scale
- converts multiplicative changes to additive
changes - Thus, db 20 x log (P1/P0) in sound pressure
level, where P0 .0002 dynes/cm2
14Amplitude Range
15Frequency cycles/sec, or Hertz(Hz, from German
physicist Heinrich Hertz)
- Middle C on piano 261.6 Hz
- http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piano_key_frequencies
16Frequency
17Frequency Range for Human HearingNominally 20
20KHz
18Normal vs. Impaired Hearing
19Comparative Hearing
20Phase
- The relative positions/timing of two waves
matched for db, Hz
21Phase
- Three binaural cues to the direction from which a
sound is coming - Phase difference between left and right ear
- Time of arrival difference
- Intensity different (head creates an auditory
shadow) - Monaurally, humans appear to be phase-deaf.
22The Ear versus the Eye
- Orientation
- Attention
- Speed
- Sensitivity
- Echoes
- Eye 400 700 nm, trichromaticity
- Ear 20-20k Hz. Tri- tonaticity? No
23Structure of the ear
- Outer structures (pinna)
- Inner structures
- Auditory canal
- Tympanic membrane, acoustic reflex
- Ossicles Malleus, Incus, Stapes
- Oval window
- Cochlea, basilar membrane, Organ of Corti
- Cilia inner vs. outer hair cells
- Mechanism of transduction
- Impedance matching 30 db loss
24The Ear, starting from the outside
25The Ear in cross-section
26The Ear in cross-section
27(No Transcript)
28MiddleEar
29(No Transcript)
30(No Transcript)
31Dynamics of the middle ear
- http//funsan.biomed.mcgill.ca/funnell/OpenHouse9
6/me_anim.html
32The Cochlea
33(No Transcript)
34(No Transcript)
35BasilarMembrane
36Hair Cells, outer and inner
Also http//mysite.du.edu/kinnamon/3640/hearing/h
earing.html
37Mouse Organ of Corti(courtesy of Audrey Nath and
Jeff Triffo)
38BrainPathwaysforaudition
Cochlear nucleus Superior Olive Inferior
colliculus Medial geniculate Auditory Cortex
(A1)
39Auditory Tuning Curves
40More Auditory Tuning Curves
41Tonotopic Map ofMonkey Auditory Cortex
42Inner EarSummary
43Coding mechanisms
- Place theory coding frequency and amplitude
- Volley principle large numbers of detectors
- Periodicity coding frequency and amplitude
- Duplicity theory 1 KHz to 4 KHz
- Missing fundamental, masking
44Pathways and Brain Mechanisms
- Cochlear nucleus
- Superior olive
- Inferior colliculus
- Medial geniculate
- Auditory cortex
- Tonotopic mapping
- Tuning curves for "tone detectors"
- Detectors tone, onset/offset, sweep
45- Psychophysics
- Basic audiogram (repeat from earlier in semester)
- Masking, critical band