A watery liquid called the perilymph moves inside the cochlea and responds to vibrations coming from the middle ear. This fluid moves over the hair cells and converts the motion into electrical signals.
sound wave energy is transformed to electrical energy.
The cochlea is a part of the human ear. The two things that the cochlea has inside it are the Organ of Corti and hair cells.
hearing loss occurs
System of tubular pathways inside the Cochlea
cochlea. eardrum. hammer. EAR WAX.
endolymph
Inside your head. The inner ear.
Semicircular Canal
the cilia inside the cochlea
the stirrup hits the cochlea and it sends waves through the liquid inside of it
The hair cells inside the cochlea
No. The cochlea transmit sound from the eardrum. The Eustachian tubes keep the pressure inside the ear equalized with the external pressure.
In general, the cochlea. More specifically, an impulse is carried into the brain along the auditory nerve when the tectorial membrane and the basilar membrane inside the cochlea are pressed together by the force of sound waves.
cochela Cochlea
Sound waves cause the thin skin of the eardrum to vibrate. This vibration, in turn, vibrates a chain of three tiny bones which are attached, at one end of the chain, to the eardrum, and at the other end of the chain, to a thin drumlike structure on on the opening to the cochlea. The vibration of this "round window" as it is called, causes the fluid inside the cochlea to flow, which in turn causes tiny hairs inside the cochlea to move. These hairs, when moved, send signals to the brain which are interpreted as sound.