Auditory System
Auditory System2
Perception
Anatomy
WILD CARD
100

Receptors that detect sound waves and pressure on the skin and ear.

What is mechanreceptors

100

Pitch is the perceptual experience of this sound characteristic.

What is frequency

100

This is the most fundamental dimension of music.

What is pitch

100

This part of the ear is involved in both hearing and equilibrium?

What is the inner ear?

200

This part of the ear is the first to catch sound waves.

What is pinna/auricle?

200

Loudness is the perceptual correlate of this sound characteristic.

What is amplitude?

200

Someone who can very accurately produce sound notes without comparing it to other notes has this.

What is absolute pitch?

200

The middle ear/tympanic cavity has these three tiny bones. (which together are called)

Ossicles

300

This part of the ear vibrates in response to sound.

What is the eardrum/tympanic membrane

300

This area of the brain is responsible for processing sound

What is the primary auditory cortex?

300

The left hemisphere is more active during this.

What is language?

300

The ossicles do this to sound.

What is to amplify sound?

400

This structure regulates the flow of ions into the cell.

What is stereocilia?

400

This type of organization refers to neighboring neurons responding to neighboring sounds.

What is tonotopic

(in the cortex and in the cochlea,)

400

Music perception is lateralized in this hemisphere

What is the Right hemisphere

400

This is the snail-shaped structure of the inner ear that houses the sensory receptors that are responsible for sensory transduction.

What is the cochlea?

500

This is a structure on the basilar membrane composed of hair cells and dendrites of auditory nerve fibers.

What is The organ of Corti?

500

The base basilar membrane is thicker and stiffer and therefore more responsive to this?

What is high-frequency sounds?

500

This area was named after a neurologist and is responsible for speech production?

What is Broca's area?

500

Movement of the basilar membrane causes hair cells to bend which does this.

What is release neurotransmitters

500

This is the pathway sound takes to get to the brain. (Must state all 4 discussed in lecture)

superior olivary nucleus- inferior colliculus- medial geniculate nucleus (MGN) Thalamus- primary auditory cortex (or auditory receiving area, A1) in the temporal lobe of the cortex. 

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