Subject: Re: painfully loud sound From: "Didier Depireux, PhD" <ddepi001(at)UMARYLAND.EDU> Date: Thu, 11 Nov 2004 18:38:16 -0500On 11/9/04 7:56 PM, "jan schnupp" <jan.schnupp(at)PHYSIOL.OX.AC.UK> wrote: > nociceptive pathways and pain) I wondered: what determines whether we > would consider a particular sound to be painfully loud? I don't remember what it feels like to feel a "painfully loud" sound (whether it is felt inside the head, or just in the ear in general), but wouldn't the tympanic membrane itself be a good candidate for the pain sensation? The tympanum is innervated by four of the cranial nerves, providing general sensation through trigeminal, facial and vagal cranial nerves on the outside surface and glossopharyngeal nerve for the inside surface. I guess this might be partially answered if I knew whether people who lose their hair cells still perceive loud sounds as being painful right after hair cell loss, even though they might not perceive the sound as being that loud? Didier __ Didier A Depireux ddepi001(at)umaryland.edu didier(at)isr.umd.edu 20 Penn Str - S218E http://neurobiology.umaryland.edu/depireux.htm Anatomy and Neurobiology Phone: 410-706-1272 (lab) University of Maryland -1273 (off) Baltimore MD 21201 USA Fax: 1-410-706-2512