Brainstem Auditory Evoked Responses (BAER): Difference between revisions
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==Auditory pathways== | ==Auditory pathways== | ||
When sound enters the ear, the sensory information is first transduced by the receptors in the cochlea (inner ear). The cochlea is composed of fluid-filled compartments separated by membranes. The membranes express hair cells that are 'tuned' to a particular frequency. Sufficient movement of the hair cells will depolarize individual fibers of the auditory portion of the VIII cranial nerve. There are inner and outer hair cells; the inner hair cells are involved in signal transduction and can connect to multiple axons of the auditory nerve. There are different types of electric potentials that are generated in the cochlea, including cochlear microphonics and summating potentials | When sound enters the ear, the sensory information is first transduced by the receptors in the cochlea (inner ear). The cochlea is composed of fluid-filled compartments separated by membranes. The membranes express hair cells that are 'tuned' to a particular frequency. Sufficient movement of the hair cells will depolarize individual fibers of the auditory portion of the VIII cranial nerve. There are inner and outer hair cells; the inner hair cells are involved in signal transduction and can connect to multiple axons of the auditory nerve. There are different types of electric potentials that are generated in the cochlea, including cochlear microphonics and summating potentials. | ||
==Stimulation== | ==Stimulation== |
Revision as of 19:12, 5 February 2020
Auditory pathways
When sound enters the ear, the sensory information is first transduced by the receptors in the cochlea (inner ear). The cochlea is composed of fluid-filled compartments separated by membranes. The membranes express hair cells that are 'tuned' to a particular frequency. Sufficient movement of the hair cells will depolarize individual fibers of the auditory portion of the VIII cranial nerve. There are inner and outer hair cells; the inner hair cells are involved in signal transduction and can connect to multiple axons of the auditory nerve. There are different types of electric potentials that are generated in the cochlea, including cochlear microphonics and summating potentials.
Stimulation
Recording Techniques
Waveform
- Peaks and neural generators
- Latencies and interpeak latencies
- Normal values