THE EAR; the Anatomy & Physiology of Hearing by Professor Fink
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 8 เม.ย. 2012
- In this Video Lecture, Professor Fink reviews the basic anatomy of the Outer Ear, Middle Ear & Inner Ear and describes the physiology of Hearing, including Sound Waves ("pitch"), Amplification by the Ear Ossicles, Transduction by the Auditory (Cochlear) Receptors ("hair cells"), and the Neural Pathway for Hearing. Reference is made to the Tympanic Membrane (Ear Drum), Auditory Tubes (Eustachian Canals), Malleus, Incus, Stapes, Oval Window, the Cochlear Canal (Duct), Endolymph, the Vestibulocochlear Nerve (VIII), Cochlear Nucleus in the Medulla Oblongata, and the Primary Auditory Area (in the Temporal Lobe of the Cerebral Cortex).
Check-out professor fink's web-site for additional resources in Biology, Anatomy, Physiology & Pharmacology: www.professorfink.com
Down-loadable e-Books of the Lecture Outlines by Professor Fink can be purchased from the WLAC Bookstore at: wlac.redshelf.com/
“Hard Copy” Lecture Outlines can be purchased from the WLAC Bookstore at: onlinestore.wlac.edu/fink.asp
Professor Fink if you’re still teaching or even seeing this, thank you sir. You’re the best teacher ever.
Thank You So Very Much for your kind words. God Bless You!
I love this professor. He's amazing! No matter your level of education, the basics are so fundamental.
The best lecturer ever.Thank you.
You are the best prof Fink. I really enjoy listening to your lecture. You are good at what you are doing. I recommend your lecture to my classmates and they liked it.
Thumbs up!!
Toyin
Thank you sooooo much professor! I have recommended your lectures to everyone in my BI232.
This was a very helpful lecture, you solved a frustrating puzzle for me. Thank you much!
Who is this awesome guy? This is the way to teach. I had so much fun.
You are the great Professor. Thanks for the video.
wish my lecturers were this coherent and helpful!
Thank you for this lecture, professor Fink!
perfect, thank you so much for making such invaluable lecture available
professor Fink, seriously, I adore you
You are amazing ! Thanks so much that was a perfect explanation
I truly appreciate your lectures!
The Incredible mechanism of the human ear. Within its marvelous range able to detect the slightest nuances of whispers. Or to hear an entire symphony in complete detail. Also containing a three dimensional orientation balance detector. Protection provided by ingenious location in skull.
Thank you Mr Professor , you are so amazing lecturer that i have never seen in my life.
Professor Fink, you are fantastic. From Sweden!
It's really amazing sir, u just kicked my confusion away.tq sir
Great lecture, thanks a lot.
great way of explaining!
Great lecturer, I admired him. Especially at 13:18 :)
Thayou so much Proff...from Mbulelo in SOUTH AFRICA
I usually wear headphones so I can watch your lectures in public, thankfully I decided not to do that for this one! Thank you so much for sharing, I have you to thank for most of my good grades in A&P
Best lecture ever!!!!thanku very mucg sir
good job proff,,,thank you
Best lecture ever
Thank you very much for this wonderful lecture. Could someone suggest the name of the book used in this presentation?
Thank you so much! :)
thank you so much
Hi mike man, thank you for your explanation regarding my question on 'Perilymph' and 'Andolymph' .I appreciate your help.
Nice one.. Thank you so much
thank you
I am hearing impaired in my right ear. the Dr. said calcium has fused the bones of my ear together. he said surgery would fix it but my mom has spent 25 years in a wheelchair because a dr had a bad day.
I am constantly collecting information about to understand how my hearing works, or in my case dosn't work. very good information. thank you.
I tried the pressure experiment, I'm not doing that again. I couldn't get em to pop. I tried yawning to the point I would impress a snake, but no pop. I took a couple advil for the imediate head ache, and it is starting to feel better, slowly depresurizing. (note to self; let's not do that again.)
What the hell was that? Is that because of the fuzing of the bones? (stifling a sneezed neeze can feel like an ice pick to) I am wondering if it isn't an issue with my Eustachian tube.
tnks
Dr. Fink, just a couple.if questions...is the cochlear canal filled with endolymph or perilymph? And, are hair cells considered neuronal cells? I thought these were simply the receptor cells that transmit information to the surrounding cochlear nerve endings?
The Cochlear Canal is filled with ENDOLYMPH fluid.
The sensory receptors for hearing and balance - hair cells - are highly specialized EPITHELIAL CELLS.
@@professorfink thank you
Hi Professor fink, A ,Great and very interesting lecture.
can you tell me ;
What is the difference between "PERILYMPH" and "ENDOLYMPH"?. I notice a of text books mention the word 'Perilymph' quite a lot .Thank You.
martin mulkeen the fluid in the scala vestibuli and the scala tympani is perilymph, and the fluid in the scala media is endolymph.
What book are you referring to
High Medium Low.... LOL Love it!
thanks for the lectures but i cannot see clearly on the white board too blurry and dull
Are crista ampullaris and cupulla the same ?
This source should be useful: michaeldmann.net/mann9.html
prof, i love you
nice lecture Prof. Fink , however could you make it more detailed. Its not enough for medical students
These Lecture-Videos were presented to Nursing majors.
okay thanks. Great lecture
May I know the author of the book?
Check-out professor fink's web-site for additional resources in Biology, Anatomy, Physiology & Pharmacology: www.professorfink.com
Down-loadable e-Books of the Lecture Outlines by Professor Fink can be purchased at: wlac.redshelf.com/
“Hard Copy” Lecture Outlines can be purchased from the WLAC Bookstore at: onlinestore.wlac.edu/fink.asp
better
im 99% positive this is the oldest TH-cam video ive watched