That is where the vibrations in the air are turned into a nerve signal and sent to the brain.
The cochlea, located in the inner ear, is responsible for converting sound waves into electrical signals that can be interpreted by the brain. This process occurs through the movement of tiny hair cells within the cochlea in response to the vibrations produced by sound waves.
The cochlea is located in the inner ear, in contact with the latter part of the 3 small bone structures that constitute the middle ear (the stirrup, hammer and anvil.)
YOUR EARS : Sound comes into the inner ear as vibrations and enters the cochlea
Internal ear.
The ear consists of three main parts: the outer ear, the middle ear, and the inner ear. The outer ear includes the ear canal and the visible part of the ear (pinna). The middle ear contains the eardrum and three small bones (ossicles) that transmit sound vibrations. The inner ear houses the cochlea and semicircular canals, which are responsible for converting sound waves into electrical signals that the brain can interpret.
No, the cochlea is located in the inner ear, not the middle ear.
Yes, the cochlea is located in the inner ear.
The cochlea, located in the inner ear, is responsible for converting sound waves into electrical signals that can be interpreted by the brain. This process occurs through the movement of tiny hair cells within the cochlea in response to the vibrations produced by sound waves.
the cochlea
ear
The cochlea in your ear is responsible for converting sound vibrations into electrical signals that can be interpreted by your brain.
it is in the cochlea of the inner ear
i think it is the cochlea
cochlea
The internal ear.
The cochlea is to the ear as the retina is to the eye for transduction. Both the cochlea and retina are sensory organs that convert external stimuli (sound for the cochlea, light for the retina) into neural signals that can be processed by the brain.
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.