Yes
No. The 'message' is carried by the auditory nerve to the brain.
No, electrical impulses generated within the auditory senses do that.
Tympanic Membrane
3 seconds
Pinna, auditory canal, eardrum, middle ear, cochlea, vestibulocochlear nerve, temporal lobe
The auditory canal allows sound to get to the eardrum.
If you had an auditory canal (a hole in the side of your head that you hear through), then yes. The ear only amplifies sound into the auditory canal's passageway. But with no auditory canal, then no, stupid, you couldn't.
No. The 'message' is carried by the auditory nerve to the brain.
The outer ear directs sound vibrations through the auditory canal to the eardrum, which is stretched across the end of the auditory canal and which transmits sound vibrations to the middle ear. There a chain of three tiny bones conducts the vibrations to the inner ear. Fluid inside the cochlea of the inner ear stimulates sensory hairs; these in turn initiate the nerve impulses that travel along the auditory nerve to the brain.
It is the same as the tubelike canal called the ear canal. This is where sound enters the ear.
The auditory canal allows sound to get to the eardrum.
The auditory canal allows sound to get to the eardrum.
No, electrical impulses generated within the auditory senses do that.
The auditory canal to the eardrum then the auditory nerve sends it to the brain for interpretation.
The external auditory meatus is the ear canal that allows sound waves to pass from the external environment to the tympanic membrane (ear drum).
Tympanic Membrane
Yes it does :) the sound waves travels to this and turns to fluids. Then it gets transmit to the brain.