The brain and hearing: Hearing disturbances associated with local brain lesions : By A. V. Baru and T. A. Karaseva. New York: Plenum Press, 1972. Pp. 116. $17.50【Key Words】doi:10.1016/0093-934X(74)90043-1J JERGERElsevier BVBrain & Language...
The organization of the brain auditory pathways of marsupials is compared with those of eutherian mammals and related to the structure of the periphery. The information on marsupials provides insight into the development of the brain and hearing in other mammals. 我来说两句 短评 ··· 热门 ...
A fine brain, or a good mind. These terms are often used interchangeably, as if they stood for the same thing. Yet the brain is material substance—so many cells and fibers, a pulpy protoplasmic mass weighing some three pounds and shut away from the outside world in a casket of bone....
Man has five senses: sight, hearing, , taste and touch. They information for the brain. For example, the eyes collect information pictures and the ears collect information on .Sight of a human's two eyes has an eyelid and an eyebrow. They
A. One is done with your brain, while the other is done with your heart. B. One is a physical action and the other is an emotional action. C. Hearing is attaching meaning to sound; listening is interpreting the meaning. D. Hearing is the taking in of sound; listening is the attachme...
The article reports on the effects of auditory stimulation on the brain and experiments that use hearing aids as a model for examining the effects of amplification on the human central auditory system (CAS), as of May 2007. The implications for both basic and clinical science of acoustic ...
Learn and share the most exciting discoveries, innovations and ideas shaping our world today.SubscribeSign up for our newslettersSee the latest storiesRead the latest issueGive a Gift Subscription Follow Us:Return & Refund Policy About Press Room FAQs Contact Us International Editions Advertise...
The brain is not a computer disk, and it isn't a cupboard. Look at the picture here. It looks a bit like weeds (杂草) in a garden, doesn't it? The picture actually shows a child's neocortex—a part of the brain that controls sight and hearing. You can guess what happens—more ...
The Hearing Brain Lab at the University of Maryland is interested in how the brain processes auditory input across the lifespan. We are located in the Department of Hearing and Speech Sciences at the University of Maryland at College Park.
UNSW researchers have answered the longstanding question of how the brain balances hearing between our ears, which is essential for localising sound, hearing in noisy conditions and for protection from noise damage.