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neurosci
Neuroscience
2nd
PurvesDale
AugustineGeorge J
FitzpatrickDavid
KatzLawrence C
LaMantiaAnthony-Samuel
McNamaraJames O
WilliamsS Mark
Sinauer Associates, Inc.0-87893-742-02001
neuroscience

 Chapter 13:  The Auditory System

A879
Overview

The auditory system is one of the engineering masterpieces of the human body. At the heart of the system is an array of miniature acoustical detectors packed into a space no larger than a pea. These detectors can faithfully transduce vibrations as small as the diameter of an atom, and they can respond a thousand times faster than visual photoreceptors. Such rapid auditory responses to acoustical cues facilitate the initial orientation of the head and body to novel stimuli, especially those that are not initially within the field of view. Although humans are highly visual creatures, much human communication is mediated by the auditory system; indeed, loss of hearing can be more socially debilitating than blindness. From a cultural perspective, the auditory system is essential not only to language, but also to music, one of the most aesthetically sophisticated forms of human expression. For these and other reasons, audition represents a fascinating and especially important aspect of sensation, and more generally of brain function.

Contents

Sound

The Audible Spectrum

A Synopsis of Auditory Function

The External Ear

The Middle Ear

The Inner Ear

Hair Cells and the Mechanoelectrical Transduction of Sound Waves

Two Kinds of Hair Cells in the Cochlea

Tuning and Timing in the Auditory Nerve

How Information from the Cochlea Reaches Targets in the Brainstem

Integrating Information from the Two Ears

Monaural Pathways from the Cochlear Nucleus to the Lateral Lemniscus

Integration in the Inferior Colliculus

The Auditory Thalamus

The Auditory Cortex

Summary

Additional Reading

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