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Sensory Hair Cells Function: Their Crucial Role in Hearing Cochlear amplification by OHCs enhances hearing sensitivity, allowing detection of sounds that would otherwise be too weak to elicit a response from IHCs alone This amplification is crucial for distinguishing soft consonant sounds in speech, which can be easily masked by ambient noise
Hair Cells in the Cochlea Must Tune Resonant Modes to the Edge of . . . To achieve the ear's astonishing frequency resolution and sensitivity to faint sounds, dissipation in the cochlea must be canceled via active processes in hair cells, effectively bringing the cochlea to the edge of instability
The clinical cochlea | Oxford Handbook of Auditory Science: The Ear . . . The cochlea is a highly complex, tightly regulated sensory end-organ responsible for the conversion of environmental sound into a meaningful auditory neuronal response Hearing loss can occur at any stage of the auditory pathway, from the ear canal to the auditory cortex
Cochlear Hearing Loss: Physiological, Psychological and Technical . . . A key concept emerging from this chapter is that cochlear hearing loss can cause changes to sensitivity (threshold effects) as well as changes to the processing of sounds that are above a person’s absolute thresholds (suprathreshold effects)
Cochlear Mechanics and Outer Hair Cell Function - Nature Recent investigations have elucidated key aspects of cochlear nonlinearity, revealing how outer hair cell electromotility directly influences basilar membrane dynamics
ANSD USHA 2020 Final Cochlear implants directly stimulate the auditory nerve and effectively bypass inner hair cell problems when ANSD is due to lesions of the inner hair cells or IHC synapse lesions
Modifications of Cochlear Responses by Oxygen Deprivation The results showed that cochlear microphonics, action potentials, and DC resting potential are oxygen-dependent Békésy 1 demonstrated that both cochlear microphonics and DC resting potential, as recorded from scala media, followed the same time-course decay during anoxia
Using volume and sensitivity (advanced user interface) - Cochlear In Australia, the Cochlear™ Osia® System is indicated for patients with conductive, mixed hearing loss and single-sided sensorineural deafness (SSD) aged 5 years and above with up to 55 decibels sensorineural hearing loss