The analysis of acousticsphysiological sound in the peripheral auditory system solves three important problems. First, sound energy impinging on the head must be captured and presented to the transduction apparatus in the ear as a suitable mechanical signal; second, this mechanical signal needs to be transduced into a neural representation that can be used by the brain; third, the resulting neural representation needs to be analyzed by central neurons to extract information useful to the animal. This chapter provides an overview of some aspects of the first two of these processes. The description is entirely focused on the mammalian auditory system, primarily on human hearing and on the hearing of a few commonly used laboratory animals (mainly rodents and carnivores). Useful summaries of non-mammalian hearing are available [12.1]. Because of the large size of the literature, review papers are referenced wherever possible.
CITATION STYLE
Young, E. (2007). Physiological Acoustics. In Springer Handbooks (pp. 429–457). Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-0-387-30425-0_12
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.