In the neck
the auditory nerve pathways carry impulses to the auditory cortices in the ?
The auditory nerve, also known as the vestibulocochlear nerve, carries messages of sound from the inner ear to the brainstem and then to the brain where sound is processed and interpreted.
The auditory nerve is formed by the cochlear nerve and the vestibular nerve. The cochlear nerve is responsible for transmitting auditory information from the cochlea to the brain, while the vestibular nerve is responsible for transmitting information related to balance and spatial orientation.
The Auditory Nerve does this.
The cochlea is the part of the human that contains the auditory nerve
auditory nerve
The eighth cranial nerve or the vestibulocochlear nerve is dedicated to auditory apparatus.
Acoustic neuroma is a tumor of the auditory nerve.
The auditory nerve, also known as the vestibulocochlear nerve, transmits sound information from the cochlea in the inner ear to the brainstem. It travels through the brainstem and reaches the auditory cortex in the temporal lobe of the brain, where sound is processed and interpreted.
The auditory nerve is responsible for relaying vibrations from the cochlea, in the inner ear, to the brain as electrical impulses. The auditory centre of the brain then interprets these as sound.
Auditory or vestibulocochlear nerve goes to your ear. It exits the skull through internal acoustic meatus along with the facial nerve.
In the inner ear, "sound" is translated into electrical energy. This electrical energy is transmitted to the brain via the 8th cranial nerve more commonly called the auditory, acoustic or vestibulocochlear nerve. The brain receives the information and translates it into what we "hear", or at least into what is most important for us to hear at that time.