MEDICAL PHYSIOLOGY

PHYSIOLOGY

CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM

Question [CLICK ON ANY CHOICE TO KNOW THE RIGHT ANSWER]
Sounds are sent from the cochlea to the brain.
A
true
B
false
C
Either A or B
D
None of the above
Explanation: 

Detailed explanation-1: -The cochlea is filled with a fluid that moves in response to the vibrations from the oval window. As the fluid moves, 25, 000 nerve endings are set into motion. These nerve endings transform the vibrations into electrical impulses that then travel along the eighth cranial nerve (auditory nerve) to the brain.

Detailed explanation-2: -When the vibrations reach the inner ear, they ripple the fluid inside a snail-shell-shaped structure called the cochlea. Now the sound waves are waves in liquid. In the cochlea, specialized receptor cells-hair cells-convert the liquid motion into electrical signals that travel on to the brain.

Detailed explanation-3: -Excerpt. The cochlea is a hollow, spiral-shaped bone found in the inner ear that plays a key role in the sense of hearing and participates in the process of auditory transduction. Sound waves are transduced into electrical impulses that the brain can interpret as individual frequencies of sound.

Detailed explanation-4: -Signals from the right ear travel to the auditory cortex located in the temporal lobe on the left side of the brain. Signals from the left ear travel to the right auditory cortex. The auditory cortices sort, process, interpret and file information about the sound.

Detailed explanation-5: -The cochlear nerve, which is attached to the cochlea and sends sound information to the brain, and the vestibular nerve, which carries balance information from the semicircular canals to the brain, together make up the vestibulocochlear (say: vess-tib-yuh-lo-KOH-klee-er) nerve.

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