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Functional Utility of Sound. Carries information helpful for locating where things are, where you are (outside, in a large room, on firm ground, etc.)Carries information good for identification (we can identify friends from their footfalls)Travels well in air (not that quickly, and with echoes and reflections, but overall does well).
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1. Audition: Sound, the Ear, & the BrainPsyc 351
2. Functional Utility of Sound Carries information helpful for locating where things are, where you are (outside, in a large room, on firm ground, etc.)
Carries information good for identification (we can identify friends from their footfalls)
Travels well in air (not that quickly, and with echoes and reflections, but overall does well)
3. The nature of sound
4. Amplitude, Frequency, Phase
5. The nature of sound
8. Sounds in the natural environment
9. Fourier analysis
10. Fourier analysis
11. Fourier Synthesis
12. Representations: amplitude waveforms vs. spectrographs
13. Amplitude: The Decibel scale A ratio scale
referenced to the classical threshold of human hearing, nominally .0002 dynes/cm2
(Factoid: dyne = force needed to accelerate 1g to 1cm/sec in 1 sec
A logarithmic scale
converts multiplicative changes to additive changes
Thus, db = 20 x log (P1/P0) in sound pressure level, where P0 = .0002 dynes/cm2
14. Amplitude Range
15. Frequency: cycles/sec, or Hertz(Hz, from German physicist Heinrich Hertz) Middle C on piano ~ 261.6 Hz
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piano_key_frequencies
16. Frequency
17. Frequency Range for Human HearingNominally 20 – 20KHz
18. Normal vs. Impaired Hearing
19. Comparative Hearing
20. Phase The relative positions/timing of two waves matched for db, Hz
21. Phase Cone: without turning your head, you cannot distinguish well the locations on the cone because they present the same three differences to the two ears.Cone: without turning your head, you cannot distinguish well the locations on the cone because they present the same three differences to the two ears.
22. The Ear versus the Eye Orientation
Attention
Speed
Sensitivity
Echoes
Eye: 400 – 700 nm, trichromaticity
Ear: 20-20k Hz. “Tri- tonaticity”? No…
23. Structure of the ear Outer structures (pinna)
Inner structures:
Auditory canal
Tympanic membrane, acoustic reflex
Ossicles: Malleus, Incus, Stapes
Oval window
Cochlea, basilar membrane, Organ of Corti
Cilia: inner vs. outer hair cells
Mechanism of transduction
Impedance matching: 30 db loss
24. The Ear, starting from the outside
25. The Ear in cross-section
26. The Ear in cross-section
28. MiddleEar
31. Dynamics of the middle ear http://funsan.biomed.mcgill.ca/~funnell/OpenHouse96/me_anim.html
32. The Cochlea
35. BasilarMembrane
36. Hair Cells, outer and inner
37. Mouse Organ of Corti(courtesy of Audrey Nath and Jeff Triffo)
38. BrainPathwaysforaudition
39. Auditory Tuning Curves
40. More Auditory Tuning Curves
41. Tonotopic Map ofMonkey Auditory Cortex
42. Inner EarSummary
43. Coding mechanisms Place theory: coding frequency and amplitude
Volley principle: large numbers of detectors
Periodicity coding: frequency and amplitude
Duplicity theory: 1 KHz to 4 KHz
Missing fundamental, masking
44. Pathways and Brain Mechanisms Cochlear nucleus
Superior olive
Inferior colliculus
Medial geniculate
Auditory cortex
Tonotopic mapping
Tuning curves for "tone detectors"
Detectors: tone, onset/offset, sweep
45. Psychophysics
Basic audiogram (repeat from earlier in semester)
Masking, critical band