What Are Ears and What Do They Do?
The ear is made up of three different sections that work together to collect sounds
and send them to the brain: the outer ear, the middle ear, and the inner ear.
The Outer Ear
The outer ear is made up of the pinna — also called the auricle (OR-ih-kul) —
and the ear canal. The pinna is the part of the ear you see on the side of your head
and is made of tough cartilage covered by skin. Its main job is to gather sounds and
funnel them to the ear canal, which is the pathway that leads to the middle ear. Glands
in the skin lining the ear canal produce earwax, which protects the canal by cleaning
out dirt and helping to prevent infections.
The Middle Ear
The middle ear is an air-filled cavity that turns sound waves into vibrations and
delivers them to the inner ear. The middle ear is separated from the outer ear by
the eardrum, or tympanic membrane, a thin piece of tissue stretched tight across the
ear canal. Sounds hit the eardrum, causing it to move.
This movement leads to vibrations of three very small bones in the middle ear known
as the ossicles (AH-sih-kuls). The ossicles are:
- the malleus (MAH-lee-us) ("hammer"), which is attached to the eardrum
- the incus (IN-kus) ("anvil"), which is attached to the malleus
- the stapes (STAY-peez) ("stirrup"), which is attached to the incus and is the
smallest bone in the body
To hear properly, the pressure on both sides of your eardrum must be equal. When
you go up or down in elevation, the air pressure changes and you may feel a popping
sensation as your ears adjust. Ears adjust thanks to the narrow Eustachian (yoo-STAY-she-en)
tube that connects the middle ear to the back of the nose and acts as a sort of pressure
valve, so the pressure stays balanced on both sides of the eardrum.
The Inner Ear
The vibrations from the middle ear change into nerve signals in the inner ear.
The inner ear includes the cochlea (KOH-klee-uh) and the semicircular canals.The snail-shaped
cochlea changes the vibrations from the middle ear into nerve signals. These signals
travel to the brain along the cochlear nerve, also known as the auditory nerve.
The semicircular canals look like three tiny, connected tubes. It's their job to
help you balance. The canals are filled with fluid and lined with tiny hairs. When
your head moves, the fluid in the canals sloshes around, moving the hairs. The hairs
send this position information as signals through the vestibular nerve to your brain.
The brain interprets these signals and sends messages to the muscles that help keep
you balanced.
When you spin around and stop, the reason you feel dizzy is because the fluid in
your semicircular canals continues to slosh around for awhile, giving your brain the
idea that you're still spinning even when you aren't. When the fluid stops moving,
the dizziness goes away.
The cochlear nerve, which is attached to the cochlea and sends sound information
to the brain, and the vestibular (veh-STIB-yuh-ler) nerve,
which carries balance information from the semicircular canals to the brain, together
make up the vestibulocochlear (vess-tib-yuh-lo-KOH-klee-er) nerve.
How Can I Keep My Child's Ears Healthy?
Teach kids not to stick things like cotton swabs and fingernails into ears. Doing
so can scratch the ear canal, push earwax
deeper into the ear, and even rupture
the eardrum. If your child is bothered by earwax, talk to your doctor.
Teach kids to protect their hearing by paying attention to the noise levels they're
exposed to. Have them turn down the volume on video games, TVs, and, especially, portable
music players. Make sure they take hearing protection (like earplugs or protective
earmuffs/headphones) when they'll be around loud
noises (at a concert, car race, etc.).
If your child has any trouble hearing, reach out to your doctor. Treating
hearing loss early can limit the damage.