Chapter4Hearingsound
Therange
Beiohearisunremarkable:powerfulsouhebodyaedevenbysingle-s。Butbeiohearaswellaswedoislittleshortofmiraculous:wequiteeasilydetedwhichdeliversapowerof10fi15wattstotheeardrums,despitethefactthatitmovesthemonlyafraofthewidthenatom。
Almostasimpressiveistherangeofsoundpowerswehear。Thegapbetweeaudiblesouhreshold,0dB)tothethresholdofpain(around130dB)ishuge:130dBis1013,whichisthenumberofpenahundredbillionpounds。
Wealsohearafairlywiderangeoffrequetenoctaves,aorethanapianokeyboard。Wedetect,thoughnottrulyhear,frequencieswellbelowaoo,aswillbeexplainedinChapter6。Andourfrequencydisatio:mostofusdetectdifferencesofaboutaquarterofasemitohpradiions,adiffereohofasemitodistinguishable。emey,bytrast,ismedioinfavourableswelydetermiionofasound’ssourabout10°horizontallyor20°vertiyotheranimalsuchbetter。
14。Theear(themiddleandinnerearsaregreatlyenlarged)。
&hemostimpressiveabilitiesisthatwederstandwordswhoselevelsarelessthaofthatofbaoiselevel(ifthatbadisabroadspreadoffrequehisfarsurpassesanymae。
Ourearshavetwofuns,hearingandbalandbalaakeirelybythesemicirals(seeFigure14)。Therestoftheearhasthusbeeoevolvethebestpossiblesystemforoursoourvocalapparatus;asarelativelateeriionithadtofltitselfincheekbyjstructurespreviouslyearmarkedfaing,lidsug,kissingandflghtiraiororaplishedsihespeechsystemfunsjustasperfectlyasaStradivariusviolin。
15。Frequendence。
Whatdoearshear?
AsFigure15shsystemshaveomeasurethephysicalpowersofsounds:apiple,hasamaximumpowerofabout0。08watt,whileatromboneageabout6watts,yetitsouerihismeansthattromboworkalotharderthanpiccoloplayers(whoinfaeverplayatfullblastinanyordinarypieusic)。Butallialpowersarelow。Aloudatfullstretchmightmas;ifitcouldkeepitupfortwomiwouldbeenoughtoboilatablespoonof>
&hispowerspreadsfromthesourydires,so,ify10metresfromsuorchestra,lessthawouldreachyoureardrums。Andwhattheyactuallydeteorethanaseriesofrapidprodsofair,whioinformatiohanhowhardtheyhitandhoidlytheyarrive。Thaterienceawholeworldofsedwithemotionahmeanihepreciseationofhighlyevolvedanatomical,eleieurolsystems。
&erear:gthesounds
&hevisiblepartoftheear,alyasafuocolleds;itsfront-to-backasymmetryalsoprovidessomeinformationabouttheirdireoveablepisomemammalspossessgreatlyassistiionflnding;thoughsomeofusalsohavethisabilitytoo,itisofbeyoaivalue。
&heauditoryalisaderaround30mmlong,ithasaresoawavelehis,dingtoafrequend3kHz。Thegaihisfrequesinalossatothers,sothealactsasapartialband-passfllter。
Attheendofthealistheeardrum(tympanie),aroughlycirculardiscofstretabout1cmacross。Itisiaheizeitsareaandsocaptureasmuchforceaspossible。Itisalsoslightlyical,whichallowsittotrahanitcouldifitwerefflat。Thedrumhasnoresonances—forfrequenciesabove~3kHz,itssurfacemovesinachaotidforlowerfrequeallmovesasohewavesarelargerthanitis。Asaresultittrapeoffrequehminimalflltering。Thisfrequenseisapartthroughitsasymmetridinpartthroughaninternalscaffoldofflbres。
Itisimportantthatthedrumistautbutnotstiff,andthisismadepossiblebytheequalizationofinterernalpressurebytheEustatube(alethatitneveris,exceptforanihereisasignifitpressurege—makingadistinctivegsouoperates)。
Themiddleear:sharpeningtheblow
Theeardrumisectedtoaseriesofthreeti,infaescalledossicles,whichoccupytheair-fllledmiddleear。Theirmainjobistocovertthewideshallowmotiooahigher-pressure‘tap’onase-likemembraheroundhichisthegatewaytotheinnerear。Bywaslevers,theossicreasetheforcebyabout1。5times。However,themainwayinwhichtheforhancedissimplythroughtheratiooftheareasoftheeardrumandtheroundhicreasesthepressureabouttwentytimesbytratingtheforallerarea。Theossiclesalsoprovidesomeprotefortheihroughtheacousticrefflex(seeChapter8)。
Theinnerear:souy
Theinnerearisfullofliquid,and,justastheeardrumvertsairboroboheroundwihelattertoaffluid-borhispassesalongthecochlea,acoiledtubeabout2g。Atitsextremityisahole(thehelia),andtheassesthroughthisaravelsbagasedtubewhiedalohefirst。Whentheleteditsdoubled-baey,itmustbeelimiherwiseitwouldrefflectbackupthedihnewlyarrivedwaves。So,thesedtubetermiaheovalwindow。Thisbulgesoutavesreachit,dissipati。
Ruhetubesliketheflllingihebasilarmembrane,whivertsthewavestonerveimpulses。Theside-by-sidetubeswouldbeabout5g,weretheynotcoileduplikeasnail(cochleaisLatinforshelengthofthecochleaisrelatedtothewavelengthofsouissimilarinallmammals:onlyabout50pergerihanaperson,sothegisprobablysimplyaspagmeasure,ratherthanhavinganyacoustiidothertinymammalsodateafull-sizecochlea。Theirsareabout1dtlytheylyhearaboutthreeorfouroparedtotheeighttotenewhidmeanimalsdetebraedtheanofwhichgrowaroundninerowsofshorthairscalledstereocilia(arouheserowsruhemembrane,andhavenerveflbresatta。Theseflbresbuoformtheauditory(coerve,whismitsimpulsestothebrain。
Thebasilarmembranemovesihesouimpi。Itisstifferasrootthanatitstip,whisthatlowerfrequendscauseossclosertothelatter。Theseosscausethestereoove,andthehaircellstowhichthestereociliaareattaserochemicalimpulsestothebraihebrainknowswhichcellsarewhere,itdetermihefrequendsbythismeans(thisisknolacetheory)。However,whehsou1kHz,thewholemembraes。Inthiscase,adifferentmeismbeportant,
inwhichthehaircellsflreihepulsesthatmakeupthesoundwave—flringoimesaserespooa100Hztoance。
&hecellsareincapablemorerapidlythanabout500timesased。Torespondtohigherfrequehereforefaceasimilarproblemtothatofasquadofsoldiersarmedwithfflintlockswhichtake,say,amioreload:howthesquadproduedguervalsof10seds?Theaodividethesquadintosixgroups。Theflrstgroupflresandstartstoreload。Teer,thesedgroupflres,andsooerthesixthgrouphasflred,theflrstgroupleteditsreloadingandwillflreagain。Haircellswroupsinjustthisway:theflrstgroupmightsignalthebrainwhehesouspeak,thesethatcyclehasfallenhalfwaytoitsmiminimumahwhenitishalftomaximum。Inthisway,suchaquartetofcell-groupscouldrespondtoatoimeshigherihantheirindividualmaximumflringrates。
Thehaircellsofthebasilarmembranealsetherinaverydifferentway:thoseiorsoouterrowsrespondtoiningsoundwavesbygtheirlengthsihem。Thismotiohevibratioereotheinnerrowofhaircells(theosendsignalstothebrain)andhenceprovidessignifltamplifl,allowingustohearsoundswhichare40dB(ohousandth)lesspowerfulthaherwisecould。Thisactivitygesownfaintsouoaissions。Theseemissireatvalueihefunalityofthehearingsystemininfantswhoaretooyouherorwhattheyhear。Also,theyoftehereisaheiheyareausefulcheckfists(hearis)too。Theyare(fortuooquiettobeheard,sosensitivein-earmiesareusedtomeasurethem。
Nervesandbraiosubjective
Thenervesignalsthatemergefromthebasilarmembramimidwaves,butessageswhithreepieation:(a)howmanynerveflbresaresignallingatonce,(b)hthebasilarmembrahoseflbresare,and(gtheintervalisbetweenburstsnals。Thebraisloudnessinformationfromabinationof(a)and(dpitationfrom(b)and(c)。
16。Losuage,aivitiesiheprimaryauditnizessounds。Broca’sareabothanalysesaits。Wernicke’sareadealswiththesequencesofspeeds(heard,made,ahesupramarginalgyrusmaydealwitharti,andtheangulargyrusmayassistrog。
ensinthebrain’shearingandlares(seeFigure16)isirelyclear,buttheflrststageinprogistoextratfeaturesfromthestreamofinputdatafromtheauditoryuresaretheinuouslyupdate,amend,aalmodelofthethieune,aspokenphrase,ihemodel’saccuracyistestedbypredigwhatthesoundwilldothebrainistryingtodoisestablishthedegreetooofasoundtributestothemeaning,aprocesscalledhierarg。Ourincredibleprowessinperfthisfunonstratedbyourabilityto,forexample,reizethatsometohum‘SomewhereOvertheRaiheygetmost。Thespeedwithwhichthemammalianbraihesoundsthatreachtheearsisalmostincredible—say‘squirrel’toadogord,andtheresponseisalmostinstantaneous。