
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: Collecting Sounds
The pinna is the part of the ear you see on the side of your head. Â Its main job is to gather sounds and funnel them to the ear canal.
The Middle Ear: Good Vibrations
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, making it move.
The Inner Ear: Nerve Signals Start Here
The vibrations from the middle ear change into nerve signals in the inner ear. The inner ear includes the cochlea 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.