How the Ear Tunes Out Sounds Before They Reach Your Brain

by
in science on (#2SJW)
In a crowded room, how do you focus on your companion's voice while ignoring the conversations going on around you? A digital model of the cochlea, the shell-shaped organ that serves as an interface between sound waves and the nervous system, suggests the ear begins filtering out background sounds before they even reach the brain.

Studying how the brain hones in on a single voice, a phenomenon known as the "cocktail party effect," can help unlock how the brain perceives sound. But it's not just about the brain. For several decades, researchers have suspected that other parts of the auditory system also play a big role.

http://www.insidescience.org/content/physics-tuning-out/1586

Re: Yes, but (Score: 0)

by Anonymous Coward on 2014-09-19 14:43 (#2SM1)

Exactly -- I think this hard-won physical adaptability is EXACTLY what allows marriages to survive as long as they do. I'm kinda serious. Without the ability to filter out nagging, or traffic noise, or AC, or ballpark/concert audiences, we'd have all killed each other long ago.
Post Comment
Subject
Comment
Captcha
Seventy five, 45 or 26: which of these is the lowest?