Applied Psychoacoustics Lecture 1: Anatomy and Physiology of the human auditory system

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Applied Psychoacoustics Lecture 1: Anatomy and Physiology of the human auditory system Jonas Braasch

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Applied Psychoacoustics Lecture 1: Anatomy and Physiology of the human auditory system. Jonas Braasch. Overview of the Human Ear. Outer Ear. Pinna: External cartiledge Provides direction dependent frequency cues for sound localization through spectral filtering - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Applied Psychoacoustics Lecture 1: Anatomy and Physiology of the human auditory system

Page 1: Applied Psychoacoustics Lecture 1: Anatomy and Physiology of the human auditory system

Applied PsychoacousticsLecture 1: Anatomy and Physiology of the human auditory system

Jonas Braasch

Page 2: Applied Psychoacoustics Lecture 1: Anatomy and Physiology of the human auditory system

Overview of the Human Ear

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Outer Ear

• Pinna: External cartiledge– Provides direction dependent frequency cues

for sound localization through spectral filtering– Position can be actively controlled by some

mammals (e.g., cat)

• Meatus (Auditory Canal) – Pathway to the middle ear, approx. 7mm

diameter, 27mm length– Amplifies sounds in the range of 2000 to 5000

Hz through resonance (approx. 10 – 15 dB)

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Simulation of the sound pressure wave in the ear

canal1 2

3 1 frontal, 2.7 kHz 2 lateral, 10 kHz3 rear, 2.7 kHz

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Photo of ear drum

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Middle Ear

http://www.bioon.com/book/biology/whole/image/11/11-5.jpg

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Middle Ear

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Middle Ear

• Tympanic Membrane– Sound pressure vibration is trancduced into

mechanical oscillation and passed on to the malleus– protects ear (e.g, water, wind)

• Ossicles– Malleus, incus, stapes (hammer, anvil, and stirrup)– are the Smallest bones in human body

• Muscles– Stapedius muscle (connected to the stapes)– Tensor tympani muscle (connected to the malleus)– are the smallest muscles in the human body

• Oval Window– connection to the cochlea

• Eustachian Tube– connects the middle ear to the throat for pressure

relief

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Function of the middle Ear

• Is an impedance transformer• Without it difference in densities of air

and the cochlear liquid would result in lossy energy transfer

• Pressure increase the pressure between the oval window and the ear drum by nearly a factor of 30– Amplitude ratio ear (drum/stapes) ~1.3:1 – Area ratio (ear drum /oval window):

~20:1

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Acoustic Reflex

• Transmission can be attenuated in the middle ear by stiffening the Stapedius muscle and the tensor tympani muscle to protect the inner ear

• Is controlled by the auditory system and react to loud sound exposure

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Arrangement to measure the pressure-force transfer function of a middle ear

(RUB-IKA)

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Vibration of the ossicular chain

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Vibration of the ossicular chain

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Vibration of the ossicular chain

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Inner Ear

Semicircular canals

Cochlear

Auditory Nerve

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Basilar Membrane

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The Traveling Wave in the Basilar Membrane

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Frequency Mapping on the BM

Logarithmic Frequency Mapping

http://www.bioon.com/book/biology/whole/image/11/11-10.jpg

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Traveling Wave Simulation

http://www.boystownhospital.org/Research/Areas/Neurobiological/MoreInfoComLab/traveling_waves.asp

250-Hz Tone

1000-Hz Tone

4000-Hz Tone

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Neurotransmitters

• are chemicals that enable communication between two neurons

• are released from one neuron at its presynaptic nerve terminal and cross the synapse, a small gap, to the receptor of the second neuron

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Connecting the ear to the auditory pathway

•95% of auditory nerve fibres (Type-I fibres: large diameter, myelinated) innervate IHCs (20- 30 to a single IHC) sending information to the CNS•5% (Type-II fibres: thin, unmyelinated) innervate OHCs (each fibre innervating 50-100 OHCs)

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Tonotopic organization of auditory nerve and cochlear

nucleus

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Definition Tonotopy

(from greek tono- and topos = place: the place of tones) is the spatial arrangement of where sound is perceived, transmitted, or received. It refers to the fact that tones close to each other in terms of frequency are represented in topologically neighbouring neurons in the brain.

from Wikipedia

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Cell Response Types

• Primary-like (PL)• Primary-like, notch (PL-N)• Phase-lock (onset)• Onset, lock (O-L)• Chopper

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Cell types

time time

time time

Acoustic stimulus Acoustic stimulus

Acoustic stimulus Acoustic stimulus

Primary-like chopper

onset Primary-like, notch

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Tuning Curves

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Post Stimulus Time (PST) Histogram

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Phase Locking

sound pressure

action potential

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Physiological Coordinate System

Direction Description

Lateral Away from the midline

Medial Toward the midline

Bilateral On both sides of the body or head

Ipsilateral On the same side of the body or

head

Contralateral

On the opposite side of the body or head

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