Auditory Transduction (2002)
- Thursday Jul 29,2010 08:03 PM
- By admin
- In bachelor
This seven-minute video of Brandon Pletscher takes viewers on a step-by-step tour through the inside of your ear to the acoustic accompaniment of classical music. Pletscher a previous medical illustration students at Medical College of Georgia, first built a natural ear model and mapped the spectrum hit what parts of the inner ears. He created digital reproductions of every part of the consultation road by means of multiple software packages. A telling describes how sound waves travel through every part of the ear and how hair cells translate the vibrations cause the nerve impulses.
25 Comments
nice.
amazing! perfect! 100 star for this.
this is just awesome!!!!
LOL my 5 y.o. kid has watched this 8 or 9 times at once
Was natural selection responsible for this?
Was natural selection responsible for this?
The better video on hearing on Youtube and all the web.
Thanks !
Nice video!
thanks man, awesome video, i’m using this for my notes in 2nd Year Physiology, much better than my lecturer!
amazing video!!!! thanks for posting it!!!!
Love how it does the music at the end going through the ear.. made me think of that crazy scene in Fantasia with Mickey mouse and the waves up the cliff! lol
@andy5579 Yes, the outer hair cells receive AP that causes them to alter the tension of the tectorial membrane!
@Stranger05 Is this because of the outer hair cell role of reducing the surface tension of the tectorial membrane instead? The reason behind otoacoustic emissions?
Thanks,
Andrew
p.s. Great video, well explained
Fantastic video!
It all makes sense now
fantastic and helpful vid. thanks
Man, what aan awesome vid. i´m a ENT&cervico-facial surgeon doctor, and i just loved this…really really usefull!thank u
I’m a very visual person and try to revise using visual aids and, I have to say, this is BY FAR the best video on the subject, accurate and creative!! I’ll dedicate my physiology A+ on the exam to you!!
Thanx mate
I like hows its done with the music. Tonotopic organisation explained well.
However, where are there any videos of the processes after this!!?
Dear Brandon Pletsch,
Thank you so much! Everything makes much more sense (:
Sincerely,
crazylittleporkchop
Great video, this will help me in my Neurobiology class
oh my goodness… best animation I have ever seen!
too gud….i woke up from sleep during the lectures coz of this video
This is a bloody good video!
The animations were sublime
great video!
Thank you so very much for posting this most information, yet concise video. Until now, I just wasn’t “getting it”. Now, by George, I think I’ve got it! Bravo, maestro!!!
@radiant3d me too
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