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  2. Auditory cortex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auditory_cortex

    In the hearing process, multiple sounds are transduced simultaneously. The role of the auditory system is to decide which components form the sound link. Many have surmised that this linkage is based on the location of sounds. However, there are numerous distortions of sound when reflected off different media, which makes this thinking unlikely.

  3. Auditory illusion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auditory_illusion

    However, that does not prevent people from being fooled by auditory illusions. Sounds that are found in words are called embedded sounds, and these sounds are the cause of some auditory illusions. A person's perception of a word can be influenced by the way they see the speaker's mouth move, even if the sound they hear is unchanged. [10]

  4. Auditory system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auditory_system

    The folds of cartilage surrounding the ear canal are called the auricle. Sound waves are reflected and attenuated when they hit the auricle, and these changes provide additional information that will help the brain determine the sound direction. The sound waves enter the auditory canal, a deceptively simple tube.

  5. Psychoacoustics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychoacoustics

    Hearing is not a purely mechanical phenomenon of wave propagation, but is also a sensory and perceptual event. When a person hears something, that something arrives at the ear as a mechanical sound wave traveling through the air, but within the ear it is transformed into neural action potentials. These nerve pulses then travel to the brain ...

  6. Auditosensory cortex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auditosensory_cortex

    Hearing is a sense of sound reception and perception. Sound reception is the receiving of sound stimuli. The sound wave is transmitted to our auditory apparatus [9] from external environment. This sensory signal is then converted to an electrical signal in a process called sensory transduction. [10]

  7. Neural encoding of sound - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neural_encoding_of_sound

    [10] Like lower regions, this region of the brain has combination-sensitive neurons that have nonlinear responses to stimuli. [6] Recent studies conducted in bats and other mammals have revealed that the ability to process and interpret modulation in frequencies primarily occurs in the superior and middle temporal gyri of the temporal lobe. [6]

  8. Hearing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hearing

    Video showing how sounds make their way from the source to the brain. Hearing, or auditory perception, is the ability to perceive sounds through an organ, such as an ear, by detecting vibrations as periodic changes in the pressure of a surrounding medium. [1] The academic field concerned with hearing is auditory science

  9. Auditory agnosia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auditory_agnosia

    A relationship between hearing and the brain was first documented by Ambroise Paré, a 16th century battlefield doctor, who associated parietal lobe damage with acquired deafness (reported in Henschen, 1918 [8]). Systematic research into the manner in which the brain processes sounds, however, only began toward the end of the 19th century.