Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

How movement affects hearing

Darpan News Desk IANS, 29 Aug, 2014 10:33 AM
  • How movement affects hearing
Ever wondered why we stop moving when we carefully want to listen to someone? This, scientists have found, is not just to prevent unwanted sounds generated by our own movements.
 
This interplay between movement and hearing also has a counterpart hidden deep in the brain.
 
Researchers have revealed exactly how the brain's motor cortex, which controls movement, can tweak the volume control in the auditory cortex.
 
Movement stimulates inhibitory neurons that, in turn, suppress the response of the auditory cortex to tones, the findings showed.
 
The new lab methods allowed the group to "get beyond a century's worth of very powerful but largely correlative observations, and develop a new, and really a harder, causality-driven view of how the brain works," said the study's senior author Richard Mooney, a professor at Duke University School of Medicine in the US.
 
The team recorded electrical activity of individual neurons in the brain's auditory cortex in mice.
 
Whenever the mice moved - walking, grooming, or making high-pitched squeaks - neurons in their auditory cortex were dampened in response to tones played to the animals, compared to when they were at rest.
 
To find out whether movement was directly influencing the auditory cortex, researchers conducted a series of experiments in awake animals using optogenetics, a powerful method that uses light to control the activity of select populations of neurons that have been genetically sensitised to light.
 
The findings contribute to the basic knowledge of how communication between the brain's motor and auditory cortexes might affect hearing during speech or musical performance.
 
Disruptions to the same circuitry may give rise to auditory hallucinations in people with schizophrenia.
 
The study appeared in the journal Nature.

MORE Tech ARTICLES

No signal! Turn your smartphone into 'walkie talkie'

No signal! Turn your smartphone into 'walkie talkie'
For hikers, outdoor enthusiasts and families that love to travel, this device is a must as this turns your smartphone into a "walkie talkie" even if you have no phone coverage....

No signal! Turn your smartphone into 'walkie talkie'

Diamond blasted with laser to decode giant planets' core

Diamond blasted with laser to decode giant planets' core
To unlock the mystery behind how the cores of 'super-Earths' or giant planets like Jupiter respond to intense atmospheric pressure, US researchers...

Diamond blasted with laser to decode giant planets' core

Relish 3D-printed ice creams soon

Relish 3D-printed ice creams soon
Bored of the same old ice cream bars and cones? A new machine that can produce amazing 3D-shaped ice creams for your kids in flat 15 minutes is here now...

Relish 3D-printed ice creams soon

X-ray to fix broken earphone

X-ray to fix broken earphone
This may sound bizarre but a US doctor has used X-ray machine to fix his broken headphone after "diagnosing" a tiny break in the cords....

X-ray to fix broken earphone

Dell begins accepting virtual currency Bitcoin

Dell begins accepting virtual currency Bitcoin
US multinational Dell, the world's third-largest PC manufacturer, said it has begun accepting bitcoin payments for purchases on the company's website, giving a new boost to that digital form of currency.

Dell begins accepting virtual currency Bitcoin

Facebook introduces new app only for celebrities

Facebook introduces new app only for celebrities
Social networking site Facebook has launched a new app called 'Mentions' for Facebook-recognised or verified celebrities to help them manage their public figure pages.

Facebook introduces new app only for celebrities