How the ear detects the pitch of sound

How the ear detects the pitch of sound

  1. Cochlea and Hair Cells:
    • The cochlea, a small spiral structure in the inner ear, plays a crucial role in pitch detection.
    • Inside the cochlea are hair cells, which are sensitive to different sound frequencies.
    • These hair cells have microscopic hair-like protrusions called stereocilia.
  2. Tuning and Location:
    • High-pitched sounds activate hair cells with shorter hair bundles, located near the entrance of the cochlea (closer to where sound enters the ear).
    • Lower-pitched sounds activate hair cells with taller hair bundles, located further inside the cochlea.
    • this pattern progresses through thousands of hair cells, each tuned to specific frequencies
  3. Information Processing:
    • When you hear different sounds, not every hair cell responds. Only the ones sensitive to specific sound frequencies get activated.
    • The brain gathers information about pitch based on the position of these activated hair cells.

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Dr. Bbosa Science

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