What creates sound waves?
the compression or rarefication of air molecules
What frequencies can the human ear perceive?
between 20 and 20 000 times per second
What are the three physical dimensions of sound?
What determines the loudness?
Anatomically, what is the impact of loundness?
What is pitch?
the frequency of the molecular vibrations (number of cycles per second)
What is timbre?
The complexity of the sound. It can be used to identify the source of the sound wave.
What are the four subdivisions of the ear?
1) outer ear
2) middle ear
3) inner ear
What is the pinna?
The outer ear
how does the sound that is funneles through the pinna reach the middle ear?
What composes the middle ear?
the ossicles
What are the three ossicles?
malleus, incus, stapes
What separates the outer and middle ear?
oval window
what composes the outer ear?
What is detected by the outer ear?
Variations in air pressure
What creates the movement of the ossicles?
the vibrations of the tympanic membrane
Why does the tympanic membrane vibrate instead of just keeping its new/deformed shape?
the middle ear has an air pressur almost identical to that of the outer air
What happens when the ossicles vibrate?
What separates the middle ear from the inner ear?
the oval window
What are the components of the inner ear?
cochlea
What is the structure of the cochlea?
Long coiled tube-like structure that contains sensory neurons. it is filled with fluid
How does the structure of the basilar membrane allow the human ear to encode the different notes?
Where are high-piched noises perceived in the basilar membrane?
in the end that is closest to the oval window
What occurs when the basilar membrane has to perceive low-frequency sounds?
the tip of the basilar membrane flexes in synchrony with the virbations