Adaptation of some sensory functions, as in dark adaptation when objects not seen at first in dim light gradually become visible.the process by which stimulus energies are changed into neural impulses.
Your nerves do. Your brain sends electrical signals through your nerves to your muscles to make you move. Signals from the far ends travel through nerves back to your brain, so you can see, hear, smell, taste, and feel.
Sound reaches the brain almost instantaneously after being detected by the ear. The brain processes and interprets the sound signals within milliseconds, allowing us to perceive and make sense of the sounds we hear.
You use your ears to hear sounds. Sound waves enter the ear canal and cause the eardrum to vibrate. These vibrations are then transmitted through the middle ear to the cochlea in the inner ear, where they are converted into electrical signals that are sent to the brain for interpretation as sound.
we hear with our ear thats how we can hear sounds <3 lol
Sound travels through the air - causing the ear-drum to vibrate. This sends impulses to teh brain which is interpreted as sound.
The brain does ALOT. It carries out your thoughts, it contains your memory. It controls your ability to speak, hear and feel. In addition, it sends nerve impulses to the bones and muscles of your body. It allows you to see the answer that I am typing. The brain also controls hormones released into your body and how much of it is released.
They help us hear sounds, and transfers the sounds into the brain.
The vibration from sounds hit the tympanic membrane (ear drum), which in turns causes the ossicles (malleus, incus, and stapes) to amplify and send the signals to the cochlear (inner ear). The cochlear processes the sounds and sends the information through the Vestibulocochlear nerve to the brain.
We use our ears to hear sounds. The ear collects sound waves, which are then transmitted as electrical signals to the brain through the auditory nerve. The brain interprets these signals as sounds.
in your inner ear there is a bone which then vibrates and sends that to the brain, after this process, you can hear stuff (unless you can't hear).
in your inner ear there is a bone which then vibrates and sends that to the brain, after this process, you can hear stuff (unless you can't hear).
When the guitar is strumed, it sends out soundwaves that pur brain picks up and converts it into sound.
the nerve of the ear sends messages to the brain to allow you to hear.
you actuallydont hear with your ears sound waves go into your ear which vibrate your eardrum and somehow sends the message to your brain that there is sound in the air.
The hairs in the cochlea help convert sound vibrations into electrical signals that the brain can interpret as sound. When sound waves enter the cochlea, they cause the hairs to move, triggering nerve impulses that are sent to the brain for processing. This allows us to hear and distinguish different sounds.
The nerve impulses evoke in the brain the subjective sensation of sound. Loudness, pitch, and quality are some of the terms we use to describe the sounds we hear. It is a great challenge for physiologists to relate these subjective responses with the physical properties of sound such as intensity and frequency.