In case somebody is interested, the tympanic duct along with the round window are needed for the perilymph to move freely. If the perilymph was to encounter a wall at the end of the vestibular duct or where the round window is, it would result in a hearing loss of 60 dB and over.
I wonder what makes somebody's cochlea hear more than another person.
I can hear the neighbors talking upstairs, but my brother hears nothing, I used to think he was little deaf, but now I know that I hear more distant sounds than other people.
This is not a good thing, because I'm not interested in the neighbors talk at all
It's a good question that I'm not sure I can answer. Human speech falls well within the range of human hearing. Possibly, your cochlea is more sensitive to sound volume. Do your ears hurt when you go to a concert with loud music?
A great help for my studies in Anatomy. Thank you for sharing.
pwright600 4 months ago
thank you
Djalitana 5 months ago
In case somebody is interested, the tympanic duct along with the round window are needed for the perilymph to move freely. If the perilymph was to encounter a wall at the end of the vestibular duct or where the round window is, it would result in a hearing loss of 60 dB and over.
Sarn0 11 months ago
Good idea to take models and the laser pointer. An approach I have not seen yet.
philippmikio2 1 year ago
I wonder what makes somebody's cochlea hear more than another person.
I can hear the neighbors talking upstairs, but my brother hears nothing, I used to think he was little deaf, but now I know that I hear more distant sounds than other people.
This is not a good thing, because I'm not interested in the neighbors talk at all
monicatov 2 years ago
@monicatov
It's a good question that I'm not sure I can answer. Human speech falls well within the range of human hearing. Possibly, your cochlea is more sensitive to sound volume. Do your ears hurt when you go to a concert with loud music?
drbobrd 2 years ago