Main content
MCAT
Course: MCAT > Unit 10
Lesson 3: Sound (Audition)Auditory processing
Created by Ronald Sahyouni.
Want to join the conversation?
- don't you mean .5 kHz and 16 kHz?(27 votes)
- why is it getting more difficult for the older people to recognize higher frequency pitches ?? The more older they get.. the more insensitive they become to higher frequencies.. why?(12 votes)
- The hair cells are very delicate cells that can be easily damaged, especially by high frequency sounds. When the cells die, they are lost permanently and cannot be replaced by newly dividing cells, because these cells do not divide. The loss of the cells accumulates with age and leads to the old people's inability to recognize the high frequency pitches. Eventually, this leads to deafness.(35 votes)
- what makes a hair cell sensitive to a certain frequency? its physical structure?(10 votes)
- Well he said in the last video it was due to its position on the base or apex on the organ of corti. Im assuming thats what we need to know for MCAT purposes. (Even though you probably took your MCAT by now) ha... But a hair cells widths and thickness are have a linear relationship with where it lies in relation to the base or apex of the organ of corti(8 votes)
- Is basilar tuning a real term? I can't find anything about it online. Place theory seems to be the more appropriate and well known term for basilar tuning.(9 votes)
- why the person getting headache for example if listen to music in so loud volume ?(5 votes)
- it harms the cochlea and as to auditory nerve which causes brain to get harmful or weaken signals and through it brain gets a headache(3 votes)
- Do each of the hair receptors have their own specific pathway along the auditory nerve that is connected to the region of the primary auditory cortex for that specific frequency? Or does the information (frequency) have to be translated again somewhere along the auditory nerve? Thanks(4 votes)
- I am not completely sure about this; however, I think that the auditory nerve is actually made up of a bundle of axons each of which are unique to the groups of hair cells specific to a given frequency. So the signal is transferred along that axon to the primary auditory cortex. That being said, the spiroganglion cells that are sort of the interneuron between the hair cells and brain might also act as a means to sort out the different frequencies before channeling them to the cortex. Good question! :)(2 votes)
- Why does everytime we add an octave to a note we end up with a "similar" note? Even of notes we haven't ever heard but somehow our brain works in a modular way associating those sounds to those 8 notes. Why is that?
What if we apply this theory to neural networks so that they can solve modular problems? Is it possible from a mathematical point of view?(2 votes) - Probably the wrong place, but can having a hearing impairment(totally deaf in 1 ear) cause someone to be really sensitive to loud voices(such as concerts) or are uncomfortable/unbearable With to things like noisy pencil sharpeners? Would that be misphonia instead?
Sometimes certain voices hurt my ears, and recently a Mechanical pencil sharpener of mine is too loud for me to use.(2 votes) - cant two things have the same frequency? if yes then how can the two sounds be distinguished?(0 votes)
- Yes, two sounds can have the same frequency. So, are they the same loudness ? If not, then they would cause a different number of hair cells in the ear to vibrate and could be distinguished. Are they from the same area? If not, then one ear's auditory center would have more vibrating hair cells than the other ear's auditory center. That is how we find locate things.(5 votes)
- I'm having trouble understanding the difference between tonotypical mapping and basilar tuning. Are they just different ways to say the same thing?(1 vote)
- They are pretty similar. Basilar tuning and tonotopical mapping refer to the ability to distinguish between different sounds.
For example, a lower frequency sound travels further into the cochlea and eventually reaches a different region of the brain than seen from a higher frequency sound that did not travel as far into the cochlea.
Simply, basilar tuning occurs in the cochlea while tonotopical mapping occurs in the brain.(1 vote)
Video transcript
Voiceover: In order to distinguish between the sounds of a base drum and something that has
a much higher frequency, such as the sound of a bee's wings flapping in the air, your brain is relying on the cochlea, in order to differentiate between the two different sounds. So, the difference between a base drum and a bee's wings flapping in the air, is the frequency. So a base drum has a very low frequency, whereas the wings of a bee, when they're moving through
the air very quickly, have a very high frequency. So as the information
from a base drum beating, or a bee's wings flapping, comes into the ear, they eventually hit the cochlea. And we went into a lot of detail about how exactly the
sound wave is converted into a neural impulse by the cochlea, that eventually reaches the brain. But now we're gonna go into
how the cochlea distinguishes between sounds of varying frequencies, and how this distinction is maintained all the way to the brain,
in order for the brain to be able to perceive different sounds. So this is known as "Auditory Processing." Your brain needs to be able to distinguish between sounds of varying frequencies, and you're actually able to hear things with a frequency of 20 hertz, all the way up to a
frequency of 20,000 hertz. So this is a huge range,
and in order to distinguish between sounds of low
and high frequencies, the brain uses the cochlea, and particularly, something known as "Basilar Tuning." And the term "basilar" comes from the basilar membrane, which is inside the cochlea. So inside the cochlea,
there's actually a membrane that contains a bunch of hair cells. And if we were to unroll this cochlea, if we took the cochlea and we unrolled it, so it's normally rolled up like this, if we unrolled it, so now it's flat, there are varying hair cells. So this would be the very base, this is the base of the cochlea, and this is the very apex, the very tip. So the base would be right here, the apex would be right here. Now if we unrolled it, and looked at which hair
cells were activated, given different sounds, we would notice that hair
cells at the very base of the cochlea were actually activated by
very high frequency sounds, and hair cells at the
very apex of the cochlea are stimulated by very
low frequency sounds. So let's look at another picture, just to make things a little bit clearer. So this picture basically just
shows the cochlea unrolled. And as I mentioned before,
this would be the base of the cochlea, I'll use a darker color. This would be the base of the cochlea, and this would be the
very tip, or the apex of the cochlea. And hair cells are found all
along the basilar membrane, so this membrane right here
is the basilar membrane, and there are hair cells
implanted inside of it, there are a whole bunch
of these hair cells. And hair cells closer to the very base respond to a very high frequency, so this is 1,600 hertz. And hair cells closer to the apex respond to a lower frequency, so 25 hertz. So this would be something
like a base drum, and something with a very high frequency, would be something like a bee's
wings flapping in the air. So as sounds with varying
frequencies reach the ear, they will stimulate different parts of the basilar membrane. So if we have a base drum being played, it has a pretty low frequency, and it'll eventually go into
the ear, reach the cochlea, and it'll actually travel
along this basilar membrane, until it reaches the hair cell that is attuned to that
particular frequency. So let's say, that this is a frequency
of 100 hertz for example. The sound waves eventually
cause fluid inside the cochlea to travel in such a way, that the hair cells
that are very sensitive to a frequency of 100 hertz, which looks like it's right around here, will actually activate. And these hair cells will
fire an action potential, and this signal will
eventually reach the brain, and it will be mapped to a very particular part of the brain. So this right here is the brain, and if you lift up this
little piece of brain, there is something known as
the "Primary Auditory Cortex." And the primary auditory cortex is this blue region over here, and it's basically
responsible for receiving all of the information from the cochlea. And you can see that
it's actually separated, similar to how the cochlea separated
to various frequencies, it's sensitive to various frequencies, this primary auditory
cortex is also sensitive to sounds of various frequencies. So, for example, this would
be a part of the cortex that receives information from hair cells that are sensitive to a
frequency of .5 hertz. And this part of the
auditory cortex receives information from hair
cells that are sensitive to a frequency of 16 hertz. And the reason that this is important, is because the brain needs
to be able to distinguish between various sounds. So if we had all the hair cells sensitive to every single sound, then whenever you heard any sound, then all the hair cells
would fire at once, and they would send this
huge signal to the brain, and the brain wouldn't
be able to distinguish between different sounds. So by having this basilar tuning, the brain is able to differentiate between sounds with a very high frequency, and sounds with a very low frequency. And this mapping, so this mapping of sounds
with a higher frequency versus sounds of a lower frequency, is known as Tonotypical Mapping." And just to summarize, we have sounds waves coming into the ear, and different sound waves
have different frequencies. And we need to be able to distinguish between the different frequencies. So the sound waves come in, they hit the cochlea, and they will activate hair cells in different parts of the cochlea. So if it's a very high frequency sound, it'll activate a hair cell over here; if it's a very low frequency sound, it'll activate a hair cell over here. And these hair cells
will actually send axons, and these axons eventually
all bundle together to form the auditory nerve. And the auditory nerve carries axons from each hair cell inside the cochlea. And the auditory nerve eventually reaches the brain, and will again separate its fibers, and reach different parts of the brain.