Sound waves are 'collected' by the ear drum. This is a film stretched across the ear canal. Much like it's namesake, it responds to sound waves by vibrating. These vibrations are read as electrical signals by your nerves, and it is transmitted to brain as impulses.
The Pinna/Pinnae collects the sound waves.
The outer ear, also known as pinna.
Your ear lobe from the external ear picks up the sound waves to concentrate into the ear canal.
'Pinna' of the ear gets sounds, which are transmitted to ear drums. The answer should be 'Outer ear'
Pinna or ear lobe collects the sound.
The pinna acts as a funnel for sound directing important information toward the earcanal and eventually the eardrum. The pinna also filters sound assisting in the localization of sounds both horizontally and vertically.
the correct answer is : ear canal or you could just write canal if you are doing a sheet/ homework sheet called: 8LD(4) Ear diagram- then write ear canal, if not then choose between; ear canal and canal
The primary function of the ears is to allow us to hear sounds. In order to hear a sound, the ears are equipped with small parts known as the "drum". What happens is when a sound finds its way into our ears, the drumb and other hairs pick up vibrations (or soundwaves), which produce a sound registration in our brains.
In human brains the cerebrum interprets motivations from the ear into sounds that we know and comprehend. ... The little hair cells in our inward ear convey electrical messages to the hear-able nerve which is associated with the hear-able focus of the mind where the electrical motivations are seen by the cerebrum as strong. In the center ear, the sound waves make the eardrum and minuscule bones vibrate. The center ear passes these vibrations to the internal ear. ... The internal ear makes an interpretation of vibrations into electrical signs. The electronic signs are conveyed into the mind by nerve cells called neurons by means of the cochlear nerve framework. For More info visit sites.google. com/view/wealthattraction/home (remove a space after dot com)
The path that it undergoes is:1.Eardrum,2.Ear Bones,3.Cochlea,4.Auditory Nerve.+++Yes, that's the anatomy but not the answer to that question, which actually almost answers itself. Sound is a series of pressure-waves travelling through the air (or water).
Outer ear
Outer ear
Outer ear
It is the outside of your ear and it collects sounds
The fleshy part of the outer ear collects the sounds and pulls them in to the canal and closer to the ear drum where they bounce off and reflect the sound back to the part of the brain that tells you ears to hear.
The pinna of the ear collects sound waves. This is the part you see on the side of the head.
The region of the ear that funnels sounds is called the Pinna. The Pinna collects sounds and acts like a funnel.
The pinna acts as a funnel for sound directing important information toward the earcanal and eventually the eardrum. The pinna also filters sound assisting in the localization of sounds both horizontally and vertically.
We hear by molucles bumping into each other which creates sound waves from vibration, which then travels into our ears...its all complicated after that :P xx
I think it is the ear drum but there may be more technical names for it.
The outer ear collects and funnels sound waves to the eardrum, where vibrations are carried into the middle ear.
the correct answer is : ear canal or you could just write canal if you are doing a sheet/ homework sheet called: 8LD(4) Ear diagram- then write ear canal, if not then choose between; ear canal and canal