The cocheal contains receptor cells that convert sound vibrations into impulses that are sent to the brain.
Your nervous system carries electric signals from your brain trough out your body.
Afferent nerves carry messages to and from the brain.
Sound waves enter through the outer ear, then sound waves move through the ear canal. Next sound waves strike the eardrum, causing it to vibrate, then vibrations enter the middle ear. Then the hammer picks up the vibrations, then vibrations are passed to the anvil. Next the vibrations are transmitted to the stirrup, then a vibrating membrane transmits vibrations to the inner ear, and then vibrations are channeled into the cochlea. Then nerve cells detect vibrations and convert them to electrical impulses, then electrical impulses are transmitted to the brain. Then the brain interprets electrical impulses as sound.
That is where the vibrations in the air are turned into a nerve signal and sent to the brain.
The cocheal contains receptor cells that convert sound vibrations into impulses that are sent to the brain.
First the outer ear catches the sound next sound travels to the eardrum then from the ear drum to the ossucles then it moves to the cochlea at last liquid carries sound vibrations to a special nerve this nerve carries messages to the brain
The cocheal contains receptor cells that convert sound vibrations into impulses that are sent to the brain.
Your brain stem.
The jugular vein carries blood from the brain towards the heart. It is identifiable in the anterolateral neck.
Nerves
Your nervous system carries electric signals from your brain trough out your body.
the organ of corti is found inside the cochlea in the middle ear. in the organ of corti are hair cells which pick up vibrations. these vibrations are what is processed by the brain as sound. so basically without it no vibrations and hence the brain will not be able to interpret the vibrations into sounds
The cochlea structure consists of three adjacent tubes separated from each other by sensitive membranes.These tubes are coiled in the shape of a snail shell and filled with fluid. Its' job is to take the physical vibrations caused by the sound wave and translate them into electrical information the brain can recognize as distinct sound.
What_is_the_path_that_sound_takes_through_the_earwaves enter through the outer ear, then sound waves move through the ear canal. Next sound waves strike the eardrum, causing it to vibrate, then vibrations enter the middle ear. Then the hammer picks up the vibrations, then vibrations are passed to the anvil. Next the vibrations are transmitted to the stirrup, then a vibrating membrane transmits vibrations to the inner ear, and then vibrations are channeled into the cochlea. Then nerve cells detect vibrations and convert them to electrical impulses, then electrical impulses are transmitted to the brain. Then the brain interprets electrical impulses as sound.
Eardrum
The optic nerve carries signals from the eyes to the brain.