the cochlear nerve (found in the ears).
The auditory nerve carries auditory impulses to the brain.
the cochlear nerve
Nerves in the ear respond to the mechanical stress of soundwaves and transmit the stress/sound accoundingly (super simplified answer)
I don't knoww.. :L
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Sound is a natural phenomenon. Hearing is a physiological detection of sound. For humans, the ear channels sound in. It stimulates nerves in the inner ear. Different nerves are stimulated by different frequencies. These nerves transmit their signals to the brain. The brain interprets the nerve signals, comparing them to signals it has heard before or those that are instinctively recognized. Why? Because the brain and the ear are made to work this way.
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.
The cochlea is the inner ear. It transforms sound into a message the nerves can carry to the brain.
Sound doesn't actually affect the nerves. Sound makes the eardrum, ear bones and the fluid in the cochlea vibrate. The vibrations in the fluid make tiny hairs on the walls move, and these cause the nerves to generate electric signals which are transmitted to the brain.
The Auditory Nerve does this.
The Optic Nerve AKA Cranial Nerve II from eye to brain for sight and Craniel Nerves III (Oculomotor) and IV (Trochlear) for Eye movement.
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