How
Does the Ear Work?
Patient
Resources | Sinus
Conditions | Pediatric
Sinusitis
The
ear has three main parts: the outer, middle and inner ear.
The outer ear (the part you can see) opens into the ear canal.
The eardrum separates the ear canal from the middle ear.
Small
bones in the middle ear help transfer sound to the inner ear.
The inner ear contains the auditory (hearing) nerve, which
leads to the brain.
Any source
of sound sends vibrations or sound waves into the air. These
funnel through the ear opening, down the ear, canal, and strike
your eardrum, causing it to vibrate.
The vibrations
are passed to the small bones of the middle ear, which
transmit them to the hearing nerve in the inner ear. Here,
the vibrations
become nerve impulses and go directly to the brain, which
interprets the
impulses as sound (music, voice, a car horn, etc.). |