EAR
Ear, the hearing organ. There are three sections of the ear,
according to the anatomy textbooks. They are the outer ear (the part we see
along the sides of our head behind the temples), the middle ear, and the inner
ear. But in terms of function, the ear has four parts: those three and the
brain. Hearing thus involves all parts of the ear as well as the auditory
cortex of the brain. The external ear helps concentrate the vibrations of air
on the ear drum and make it vibrate. These vibrations are transmitted by a
chain of little bones in the middle ear to the inner ear. There they stimulate
the fibers of the auditory nerve to transmit impulses to the brain.
The outer ear looks complicated but it is the simplest part of the
ear. It consists of the pinna or auricle (the visible projecting portion of the
ear), the external acoustic meatus (the outside opening to the ear canal), and
the external ear canal that leads to the ear drum. In sum, there is the pinna,
the meatus and the canal. That's all. And the external ear has only to
concentrate air vibrations on the ear drum and make the drum vibrate.
The middle ear consists of the ear drum (the tympanum or tympanic
membrane) and, beyond it, a cavity. This cavity is connected via a canal (the
Eustachian tube) to the pharynx (the nasopharynx). The Eustachian tube permits
the gas pressure in the middle ear cavity to adjust to external air pressure, The
middle ear cavity also contains a chain of 3 little bones (ossicles) that
connect the ear drum to the internal ear. The ossicles are named the malleus,
incus, and stapes. In sum, the middle ear communicates with the pharynx,
equilibrates with external pressure and transmits the ear drum vibrations to
the inner ear.
The internal ear is highly complex. The essential component of the
inner ear for hearing is the membranous labyrinth where the fibers of the
auditory nerve (the nerve connecting the ear to the brain) end. The membranous
labyrinth is a system of communicating sacs and ducts (tubes) filled with fluid
(the endolymph). The membranous labyrinth is lodged within a cavity called the
bony labyrinth. At some points the membranous labyrinth is attached to the bony
labyrinth and at other points the membranous labyrinth is suspended in a fluid
(the perilymph) within the bony labyrinth. The bony labyrinth has three parts:
a central cavity (the vestibule), semicircular canals (which open into the
vestibule) and the cochlea (a snail-shaped spiral tube). The membranous
labyrinth also has a vestibule which consists of two sacs (called the utriculus
and sacculus) connected by a narrow tube. The utriculus, the larger of the two
sacs, is the principal organ of the vestibular system (which informs us about
the position and movement of the head). The smaller of the two sacs, the
sacculus (literally, the little sac) is connected with a membranous tube in the
cochlea containing the organ of Corti. It is in the organ of Corti that situated the hair cells, the special sensory
receptors for hearing.
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