This is what creates flavor.
What does smell plus taste create?
This is what packets of light are called.
What are photons?
The smallest bones are found here.
What is in the middle ear?
Amplitude of a sound wave is perceived as this.
What is loudness?
The sense organs associated with equilibrium are here.
What is in the inner ear?
This is how many odors a human can distinguish.
What are thousands of odors?
Why does the lens flatten?
This is where the otoliths are found.
What is in the inner ear?
This is what sound loudness is measured in.
What are decibels?
This is the nerve that is associated with equilibrium.
What is the vestibulocochlear nerve?
These are the taste sensations that exist on your taste buds.
What are salty, sweet, bitter, sour, and umami?
The eye has 70-80% of this compared to the rest of the body.
What are sensory receptors?
The ear drum also goes by this name.
What is the tympanic membrane?
This is the test that assesses possible conduction deafness by comparing bone and air conduction.
What is the Rinne test?
What is the crista ampullaris?
This is where the receptor cells for taste are located.
Where is the tongue, oral cavity, and pharynx?
This is another word for both nearsightedness and farsightedness.
What is myopia and hyperopia?
These are the names of the 3 bones in the middle ear; also the name of the opening of the ear to the outside.
What is the malleus, incus, and stapes; along with what the external acoustic meatus is?
This is where hearing is interpreted in the cerebrum.
What is in the temporal lobe?
This depends on the unconscious awareness of body position and movements.
What is the sense of equilibrium?
This is where taste interpretation takes place in the brain.
What is the insula?
Visual activity is measured with this chart.
What is the Snellen eye chart?
The cochlear nerve serves as a branch of this nerve.
What is the vestibulocochlear nerve?
This is the range of human hearing.
What has approximate range of 20 to 20,000 Hz?
This is another name for the eye twitching that occurs during rotational movement.
What is nystagmus?