Anatomy
Function
Testing
Disorders
Open
100

The Auricle (pinna) & External Acoustic meatus (auditory canal)

What is the External (outer) Ear?

100

A thin flap of skin that stretches tight like a drum and vibrates when sound hits it.

What is the Tympanic membrane?

100

This term describes the hearing loss as mild, moderate, severe or profound.  

What is the degree of hearing loss?

100

Fluid, typically secreted by the mucous membrane, getting “sucked into” the middle ear cavity

What is Otitis Media?

100

This professional works with people of all ages to treat communicative disorders including feeding and swallowing.

Who is a Speech-language Pathologist?

200

The three smallest bones in the human body.

What are the Malleus, Incus and Stapes?

200

A fluid-filled, spiral-shaped cavity found in the inner ear that plays a vital role in the sense of hearing

What is the Cochlea?

200

This term describes the hearing loss as conductive, sensorineural or mixed.

What is the type of hearing loss?

200

Difficulty interpreting auditory information in the absence of peripheral hearing disorder.

What is Auditory Processing Disorder?

200

At around this week of pregnancy, your unborn baby will start being able to hear sounds in your body like your heartbeat.

What is the 18th week?

300

Tectorial Membrane, stereocilia, inner and outer hair cells, Basilar Membrane

What is the Organ of Corti?

300

When these pressure (or sound) waves reach the ear, the ear "converts" this mechanical stimulus (pressure wave) into a nerve impulse (electrical signal) that the brain perceives as sound.

What is Auditory Transduction?

300

This can be used to test the hearing thresholds of both air conduction and bone conduction in the human ear.

What is Pure Tone Audiometry?

300

Normal outer hair cell function, but dyssynchronous auditory nerve response.

What is auditory neuropathy?

300
She is a famous women who was born deaf and blind and the author of "The Story of my Life."

Who is Helen Keller?

400

Another name for the VIII cranial nerve.

What is the vestibulocochlear nerve?

400
The part of the human ear responsible for carrying sound vibrations from the middle ear to the inner ear, where they will be transferred to nerve signals that will be sent on to the brain.


What is the Oval Window?

400

This test is used to check the function of the middle (including the stapedius muscle) and inner ear and some of the central auditory pathway structures.

What is Acoustic Reflex Test?

400

This can be caused by a number of things, including broken or damaged hair cells in the part of the ear that receives sound (cochlea); changes in how blood moves through nearby blood vessels (carotid artery); problems with the joint of the jaw bone (temporomandibular joint); and problems with how the brain processes sound.

What is Tinnitus (tih-NITE-us)?

400

This term describes the condition when one is hearing voices speaking when there is no-one there.

What is auditory hallucination?

500

An opening that connects the middle ear with the nasal-sinus cavity.

What is the Eustachian Tube?

500

This occurs when stapes bone, in the middle ear, gets pulled due to the contraction of the stapedius muscle in response to sounds of sufficient intensity.

What is Acoustic Reflex?

500

This hearing loss can be caused by a variety of pathologies including infections, demyelinating diseases like multiple sclerosis, auditory neuropathy, or acoustic neuromas

What is retrocochlear hearing loss?

500

This surgical procedure is to create a hole in the ear drum to allow fluid that is trapped in the middle ear to drain out.

What is myringotomy?

500

This term is used to describe the capacity of the nervous system to modify itself, functionally and structurally, in response to experience and injury.

What is NEURALPLASTICITY?