Cochlea is the part of inner ear, which detects sound waves.
The semicircular canals (balance).
The cochlea is the main sensory organ responsible for hearing in the ear. It contains hair cells that convert sound vibrations into electrical signals that are sent to the brain. The auditory nerve then carries these signals to the brain for processing.
The cochlea is the part of the inner ear that deals with hearing. It contains the sensory cells responsible for detecting sound vibrations and converting them into electrical signals that are sent to the brain for interpretation.
The inner ear
The receptors for hearing are located in the cochlea of the inner ear, while the receptors for equilibrium (balance) are located in the vestibular system, which includes the semicircular canals and otolithic organs within the inner ear.
In the inner ear.
Well, ear defenders will sit over your whole ear protecting all of it. But the part that's important to protect is the inner ear, that's where the actual hearing takes place.
The outer ear, consisting of the earlobe and ear canal, has no direct role in hearing. Its main function is to collect sound waves from the environment and channel them towards the middle and inner ear where the process of hearing takes place.
The eardrum is part of the auditory system which is responsible for hearing. It is a membrane that separates the outer ear from the middle ear and plays a crucial role in transmitting sound vibrations to the inner ear.
Inner ear
"Hearing" - the conversion of sound into nerve impulses - occurs in the inner ear. The outer and middle are concerned with changing pressure waves in air into pressure waves in a liquid.