they are located in the ears and are used when vibrations hit your ear drum and it comes to you as sound and the time it takes to do this can be instant to you but it does require something to hear people with hearing loss or deafness don't have the ability to hear as good as they are born without or with bad ear drums that don't function like people who can hear.
It depends on what the receptor cells are for. If they are for vision, they are located in the retina of the eye. If they are for hearing, they are located in the organ of Corti, and so on and so forth.
yes the auditory receptor cells are located in the anvil
Semicircular Canal
The rods and cones located in the retina.
sensory receptor
It depends on what the receptor cells are for. If they are for vision, they are located in the retina of the eye. If they are for hearing, they are located in the organ of Corti, and so on and so forth.
No, hearing aids cannot correct the destruction of receptor hair cells.
The organ of Corti is located in the Cochlea. The Cochlea is in the inner ear, it is the snailed-shaped, spiral tube that contains the organ of Corti, the receptor for hearing.
spiral organ of Corti
yes the auditory receptor cells are located in the anvil
Semicircular Canal
Organ of Corti
beta-one receptor
skin
Hearing aids.
high in each nostril
The rods and cones located in the retina.