Section 3 Auditory System Flashcards Preview

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Flashcards in Section 3 Auditory System Deck (108)
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1
Q

Sound can be categorized according to:

A

freq and amp

2
Q

Vibration, per second, freq determines:

A

pitch

3
Q

Typical speech is __ Hz:

A

500-3000Hz

4
Q

Amplitude is measured in:

A

decibels

5
Q

Loudness is measured in:

A

vibrations per second

6
Q

How many decibels is normal conversation, whisper, and lawnmower?

A

60dB, 15dB, and 90dB

7
Q

0 dB is:

A

near silence

8
Q

Where is the auditory system most sensitive?

A

1-4 kHz

9
Q

Above what dB do you no longer hear tone, but it turns to pain or noise?

A

120dB

10
Q

What is the perception limit of humans?

A

about 4 kHz (this is at about 100dB)

11
Q

The far L side of the Freq vs dB graphs starts at how many dB?

A
  1. This is the dB level around which the lowest frequencies can be heard
12
Q

How many decibels are we at when the perception limit has been reached?

A

about 100 dB

13
Q

T or F? The eardrum is located in the middle ear.

A

F. outer ear.

14
Q

Parts of the outer ear:

A

pinna, external auditory meatus/canal, and ear drum

15
Q

ear drum is aka:

A

typmpanum

16
Q

What structure is physically connected to the eardrum?

A

Maleus

17
Q

Parts of the middle ear:

A

malleus, incus, stapes (hammer, anvil, stirrup)

18
Q

How many tiems do the ossicles amplify the amplitude of sound?

A

25 times the amplitude

19
Q

T or F? The moves of the tympanum are very large.

A

F.

20
Q

Human ear can detect sounds that involve air moves of less than:

A

1nm

21
Q

Most efficient frequency range:

A

1-4kHz

22
Q

Interruption or calcification of the ossicle chain can result in a hearing loss of:

A

60dB

23
Q

What muscles protect the cochlea from damage due to very loud noise?

A

Stapedius and tensor tympani

24
Q

When does the stapediius contract?

A

Just before we speak or chew, in response to loud external sound

25
Q

Damage to what can cause an intolerance to noise and difficulty hearing in noisy surroundings?

A

stapedius m.

26
Q

The tensor tympani m. acts:

A

reflexively with stapedius

27
Q

To what is the tensor tympani attached?

A

malleus and tympanic membrane (pulls inward to make more tense)

28
Q

What takes place in the cochlea?

A

Sound energy is transduced into neural signals

29
Q

How is the cochlea divided?

A

Into 3 sub-tubes separated by 2 membranes

30
Q

The basilar membrane separates:

A

endolymph from perilymph

31
Q

What does the basilar membrane contain?

A

The cochlear hair cells

32
Q

Hair cells project into:

A

endolymph

33
Q

Info is transferred from the cochlea to the brain via this ganglion:

A

spiral ganglion

34
Q

All neural action takes place here:

A

basilar membrane

35
Q

Hair cell bundles are always associated with:

A

endolymph

36
Q

What causes vibration of the basilar membrane?

A

Movements of cochealr fluids in response to head moves

37
Q

Most medial portion of the inner ear:

A

helicotrema

38
Q

What region of the basilar membrane vibrates the most in response to high frequencies?

A

base

39
Q

What region of the basilar membrane vibrate the most in response to low frequencies?

A

apex

40
Q

The basilar membrane gets narrower and stiffer going toward this end:

A

base

41
Q

What allows for the different parts of the basilar membrane to respond differentially to different parts of sound?

A

variability in width and stiffness

42
Q

Are higher or lower Hz frequencies hear in the center of the coiled cochlea?

A

lower

43
Q

Parts of the organ of corti:

A

tectorial membrane and hair cells

44
Q

2 kinds of hair cells:

A

inner hair cells and outer hair cells: (outside of spiral) about 12,000/ cochlea, to discrimination bw sounds, tune up the fxn of the basilar membrane (lengthen and contract in response to sound coming in)

45
Q

Vestibular system and this system:

A

air cells are associated with a flexible membrane

46
Q

inner hair cells:

A

middle of spiral, X section through the cochlear will only reveal 1 in each section, 3,500/ cochlea, send info about sound to CNS

47
Q

outer hair cells:

A

outside of spiral, about 12,000/ cochlea, to help to discriminate bw sounds, tune up the fxn of the basilar membrane (lengthen and contract in response to sound coming in)

48
Q

How do the outer hair cells help to discriminate bw sounds?

A

lengthen or contract in response to sound or msg brought to the cochlea form the brain via efferent axons which selectively controls the motion of the basilar and tectorial membranes

49
Q

What helps to reduce the cochlea’s response to constant background noise, allowing a greater response to transient and selectively-attended sounds?

A

Outer hair cells

50
Q

When can a cochlear implant be placed to directly activate the correct nerve endings?

A

When damage or a genetic anolmaly has destroyed hair cells but not 8th nerve fibers

51
Q

How does a cochlear implant work?

A

Decode freq, tells the processing system what range of freq are coming in, transmit to a receiver that has been transplanted, send info to cochlear implant

52
Q

Implant electrodes are activated according to what?

A

frequencies needed at a given time

53
Q

Causes of hair cell loss:

A

drugs (streptomycin), diuretics (furosemide), anticancer chemotherapeutics (cisplatin)

54
Q

How does loud noise lead to hearing loss?

A

Cell death induced by ROS

55
Q

What break easily with eposure to noise?

A

Tip links

56
Q

T or F? Tip links can regenerate.

A

T. within hours

57
Q

What causes temporary hearing loss after a loud blast of sound?

A

Breaking of tip links and their regeneration

58
Q

T or F? Hair cells regenerate.

A

F

59
Q

How many genes have been connected to deafness?

A

About 40

60
Q

Are the genetic causes of hearing loss dominant or recessive?

A

Either

61
Q

Genetic mutatins can cause deafness due to:

A

no hair cells, incorrect orientation of hair cells, disorganized hair cell bundles, etc.

62
Q

What frequencies are lost faster with age?

A

Higher frequencies

63
Q

Higher thershold =

A

greater hearing loss

64
Q

Are men or women more vulnerable to hearing loss?

A

men

65
Q

Presbycusis:

A

loss of inner hair cells w age, fewer cells to signal different sound frequencies AND a loss of outer hair cells - fewer to tune up the freq selectivity of the basilar membrane

66
Q

Tips are associated with:

A

the tectorial membrane.

67
Q

Explain sound induced membrane moves:

A

Sound enters the cochlear and causes basilar and tectorial mems to move/flex, they pivot around 2 separate points, the relative movement and shear of the fluid bw them will cause the hair bundles to move

68
Q

Amount of moves depends on:

A

freq

69
Q

Louder sounds cause:

A

bigger amp vibrations, more NT release from hair cells, higher firing rate

70
Q

How is intensity coded?

A

In populations of 8th nerve fibers with different thresholds

71
Q

T or F? A single fiber can respond over the full listening range of 120 dB.

A

F

72
Q

The auditory n. is associated with what ganglion?

A

spiral ganglion

73
Q

T or F? Most of the neurons form the spiral ganglion innervation the outer hair cells.

A

F. relatively few

74
Q

There are ___ times as many spiral ganglion cells as outer hair cells

A

10

75
Q

About __ % of the spiral ganglion innervate only one inner hair cell.

A

90%

76
Q

What do the spiral ganglion neurons transmit?

A

inner hair cell activity to the brain

77
Q

Each inner hair cell is innervated by __-__ auditory fibers.

A

9-10

78
Q

Why is each inner hair cell innervated by so many auditory fibers?

A

A single fiber can not respond over the full range of sound. Full intensity range is over a billion to one.

79
Q

Why have so many 8th n. cells contact each hair cell?

A

to encode diff sound intensities

80
Q

What happens when a fiber maxes out at high vibrations?

A

another fiber takes over for the higher intensity (loudness) range. Divided up to tell you about different parts of the loudness

81
Q

How is loudness coded?

A

in populations of 8th n. fibers w different thresholds

82
Q

Efferent innervation to the cochlear comes from:

A

neurons in the superior olivary complex of the brainstem terminate in the cochlea, control the outer hair cells (shape and stiffness)

83
Q

What controls the outer hair cells shape and stiffness?

A

Efferent innervation from neurons in the sup olivary complex

84
Q

Otoacoustic emissions:

A

sounds produced by ears in response to healthy stimulations.

85
Q

Otoacoustic emissions are used to clinically test:

A

whether newborn babies have a functional auditory system

86
Q

How does the otoacoustic emissions test work?

A

A reflection of the vibrations entering the ear, from hair cells into the brain, and back out through the efferents

87
Q

Otoacoustic emissions are a byproduct of:

A

the activity of the outer hair cells in the cochlea

88
Q

What’s the name of the frequency coding map for hearing?

A

tonotopic map

89
Q

What are there tonotopic map for?

A

both the hair cells and the nerve cells

90
Q

At what freq is our hearing most sensitive? What is the lowest B we can hear at that point?

A

4 kHz, 2?

91
Q

What happens as we make the sounds louder (higher dB) than the most sensitive frequency?

A

we can respond to a wider range of freq

92
Q

T or F? Each hair cell and each auditory nerve axon has a particular characteristic frequency.

A

T

93
Q

What is the freq threshold?

A

the quietest sound that elicits a response at a particular freq

94
Q

T or F? Hair cells and axons can respond to nearby frequencies if they are loud enough.

A

T

95
Q

What does the 8th n. activity encode?

A

freq and loudness of sound

96
Q

Which axons are firing faster determines:

A

freq of sound

97
Q

How many axons are firing, and how fast they are firing determines:

A

loudness

98
Q

T or F? Cells in the cochlear nuclei can respond like 8th fibers.

A

T Respond to one freq, and can respond to nearby freq as the sound bc louder

99
Q

Do the cells in the cochlear nuclei respond to a narrow or wide range of frequencies?

A

depends on the cell type

100
Q

What are cells in the cochlear nuclei inhibited by?

A

higher and lower frequencies

101
Q

T or F? Some cells in the cochlear nuclei only respond to sound when there is a change in loudness.

A

T

102
Q

How do cells at higher levels respond differently than those in the cochlear nuclei?

A

many are more selective for a particular frequency than the cells in the cochlear nuclei

103
Q

What complex property do some cells at higher levels possess?

A

selectivity for freq modulation, these only respond to changes in freq

104
Q

T or F? Some cells at higher levels are intensity-tunes; they respond best at a particular loudness.

A

T

105
Q

2 kinds of binaural cues that help in localizing sound sources:

A

Timing and intensity

106
Q

Fxns of pinna:

A

help in localizing where sound is coming from, directional amplifier of sound

107
Q

How does the pinna act as a directional amplifier of sound?

A

the frequency of a particular sound will be altered depending upon where it comes from

108
Q

How do we think the auditory regions of the cortex are subdivided?

A

“what: stream and “where” stream