Erstellt von Reeth G
vor 6 Monate
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what does the auditory processing stream consist of?
do the air molecules in space more or the waves?
what energy is the sound wave?
what is sound?
what is a sound wavelength made up of?
what are the high pressure & low pressure areas called?
What does frequency refer to perceptually?
what does amplitude (intensity) refer to perceptually?
how it amplitude measured
what is complexity perceptually?
what are the units for frequency
what is the hearing range for a human?
what is the frequency of the middle C on a piano?
what does high amplitude mean?
the higher the frequency..?
what is the threshold for human hearing in terms of loudness?
what is the threshold for pain?
what are complex waves consisted of?
what does the fundamental frequency determine?
what do the harmonics determine?
what does our outer ear do to the incoming sound waves?
where does auditory transduction take place?
where does the sound wave travel to from the auditory canal?
what does the air pressure change into after reaching the eardums?
where do these vibrations go next after the eardrum?
where is the vestibular system?
what are the 3 things called that make up the vestibular system? what is a key trait of them?
name of fluid in the semi-circular canals
what is our vestibular system responsible for? what happens if there's damage to this?
what is the vestibular-ocular reflex?
what are the 3 small bones in our middle ear called? name all three
where is the malleus located
what is the stapes connected to?
what is the process of the 3 bones vibrating, causing the fluid in the cochlear to move called?
what is the membrane in the cochlear called?
what can the ear act as?
how does sounds travel thru the basilar membrane?
what is in the cochlear that is extremely vulnerable to damage?
what happens when a hair cell is deflected?
what is the measurement hair cells can respond to?
what are our hair cells described to be in terms of frequency?
what is the arrangement in the primary auditory cortex?
what is this arrangement similar to?
what are the points of auditory transduction where the energy becomes mechanical?
what are the 3 things needs for auditory perception?
are pitch & loudness independent?
explain how so
what cues do we rely on for space perception, and what are these described as?
whats the doppler effect?
what does binaueral space perception consist of?
whats it called when our head gets in the way of sound processing?
up to what differences in time can we detect?
how do we group streams of sound in the same proximity into?