Title: The Auditory and Vestibular System
1The Auditory and Vestibular System
2The Auditory and Vestibular System
- Auditory System - sense of hearing
- Used to detect sound
- We are also able to interpret nuances of sound.
- Important in communication and survival
- Able to evoke sensations and emotions
- Vestibular system - sense of balance
- Informs nervous system about the relative
position and movement of the head - Subconsciously controls muscle to reorient body
and eye position.
3The Nature of Sound
- Hearing is a response to vibrating air molecules.
- Sounds are audible variations in air pressure
- Moving objects compress air as they move forward
and decrease the density of air as they move
away. - Waves move at 343 m / sec or 767 mph.
4The Nature of Sound
- Pitch is determined by the frequency of vibration
- Frequency the number of compressions per
second. - One cycle is the distance between the waves of
compression - Frequency is expressed in hertz (Hz)
- Hearing range is 20 to 20,000 Hz.
- Most sensitive to frequencies ranging from 1,500
to 4,000 Hz. - Decreases with age or exposure to loud sounds.
- There are high and low sounds that our ears
cannot hear. (Just like light) - Loudness difference in pressure between
compressed and rarefied patches of air - Range is tremendous
- loudest sound without ear damage is a trillion
times greater than the faintest sound we can hear - Intensity is expressed in decibels (dB)
- 120 to 140 dB causing pain in most people.
- Real world sounds rarely consist of simple
periodic sound waves at one frequency or
intensity.
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6The Structure of the Auditory System
- Outer Ear
- Auricle or Pinna
- External Auditory Meatus
- Tympanic Membrane
- Middle Ear
- Ear ossicles
- Inner Ear
- Vestibule
- Cochlea
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8Middle Ear
- Ear Ossicles
- Malleus, Incus, Stapes
- Act as a lever system to amplify sound.
- Eustachian tube
- Equalizes pressure in middle ear
- Attenuation Reflex
- Tensor Tympani and Stapedius Muscle
- Reduces hearing saturation levels
- Protects the inner ear.
- Reduces low-frequency background noise.
9The Inner Ear
- Vestibule
- Semicircular Canals
- Cochlea
- Chambers
- Scala Vestibuli
- Scala Media
- Scala Tympani
- Membranes
- Basilar membrane
- Reissners (vestibular) membrane
- Tectorial membrane
- Stria vascularis
10Cochlear Structures
- Oval Window
- Round window
- Helicotrema
- Basilar membrane
- widens toward the Apex of cochlea.
- Perilymph
- Fills Scala Vestiblia and Scala Tympani
- Low K, High Na
- Endolymph
- Fills Scala media
- High K, Low Na
- Produces and endocochlear potential that enhances
auditory transduction
11Basilar Membrane
- Structural properties determine how the membrane
responds to sound. - Wider at apex than at the base by 5 times.
- Stiffest at base and most flexible at apex.
- Movement of stapes causes endolymph to flow
causing a traveling wave in the membrane - The distance the wave travels depends on the
frequency of the wave. - Different locations of the basilar membrane are
maximally deformed at different frequencies
creating a placed code.
12Response of the Basilar Membrane to Sound
- High frequency waves dissipate near the narrow,
stiff base. - Low frequency waves dissipate near the wide
flexible apex. - A place code where maximum amplitude deflection
occurs is responsible for the neural coding of
pitch.
13Organ of Corti
- Hair cells
- Three rows of outer hair cells and one inner.
- Stereocilia are embedded in the reticular lamina
and tectorial membrane. - Have no axons
- Interact with bipolar spiral ganglion cells that
form the cochlear (auditory) nerve.
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15Transduction by Hair Cells.
- Vibration in the basilar membrane results in the
bending of stereocilia - Stereocilia are cross linked by filaments and
move together as a unit. - Bending of steriocilia causes changes in the
polarization of the hair cells. - Displacement of only 0.3 nm can be detected
(diameter of a large molecule). - Loud noises that saturate hair cells move
stereocilia by only 20 nm.
16- Bending depolarizes or hyperpolarizes hair cells
depending on the direction the stereocilia are
pulled. - Hair cell receptor potentials closely follow the
air pressure changes during a low-frequency
sound.
17Depolarization of Hair Cells.
- K channels on the stereocilia are linked by
elastic filaments. - Displacement of cilia opens or closes K channels
- K entering cell causes depolarization.
- Note K entry generally causes
hyperpolarization. - Endolymph has a high concentration of K.
- Depolarization causes voltage gated Ca channels
to open - Ca triggers the release of neurotransmitter.
High K Low Na
High Na Low K
18The Innervation of Hair Cells
- Auditory nerves are bipolar with nuclei in the
spiral ganglian. - 95 of spiral ganglian neurons communicate with
inner hair cells. - Each inner hair cells feeds about 10 spiral
ganglian cells - Most detection of sound occurs on the inner hair
cell. - One spiral ganglian cell will connect to multiple
outer hair cells.
19Amplification by Outer Hair Cells
- Motor proteins in the outer hair cells can
shorten hair cells. - Shortening of hair cells increases the bending of
the basilar membrane. - Amplification of basilar membrane vibration
causes the stereocilia on the inner hair cells
bend more. - Furosemide inactivates outer hair cell motor
proteins thus reducing transduction.
20Central Auditory Processes
- Spiral ganglion neurons travel through the
vestibulo-cochlear nerve to the medulla and
branch to enter both the dorsal and ventral
cochlear nucleus. - Neural signals travel through numerous pathways.
- The ventral cochlear nucleus projects to the
superior olive on both sides of the brain then
through the lateral lemniscus. - The dorsal path bipasses the superior olive.
- All paths converge at the Inferior Colliculus
then go on to the Medial Geniculate Nucleus then
into the Auditory Cortex.
21Central Auditory Processes
- Inferior colliculus communicates with the
superior colliculus to integrate with visual
input. - There is an extensive feedback system in the
auditory system - Other than the cochlear nuclei, auditory nuclei
receive input from both ears.
22Response Properties of Spiral Ganglion Cells
- Spiral ganglion cells are frequency tuned.
- Each cell responds at a characteristic frequency.
- Response properties of nuclei are diverse
- Cochlear nuclei -specialized for varying time
with frequency - MGN- Vocalization
- Superior Olive - Sound localization
23Encoding Sound Intensity and Frequency
- Sounds are diverse and complex
- Our brain must analyze the important ones and
ignore the noise - Sound is differentiated based upon intensity,
frequency and point of origin - Each of these features is represented differently
in the auditory pathway.
24Stimulus Intensity
- Encoded by the firing rates of neurons and by the
number of active neurons.
25Stimulus Frequency and Tonotopy
26- Phase Locking firing at the same phase of a
sound wave - Necessary because low frequency are difficult to
distinguish and displacement of the basilar
membrane changes with intensity
- Below 4000Hz phase locking is necessary.
- At intermediate ranges both phase locking and
tonotopy are used - At high frequencies only tonotopy is use.l
27Interaural time delay as a cue to the
localization of sound
28- Continuous tones are difficult to localize.
- Use phase of sound for low frequency
- Use interaural intensity differences and time
delays created by a sound shadow at high
frequency
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