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Old March 30, 2005, 09:59 AM   #37
snacktrack
Senior Member
 
Join Date: January 20, 2005
Location: Wilmington DE
Posts: 291
Thank the smallest muscles in your body for protecting you

Actually the ear is an amazing piece of machinery. The smallest muscles in your entire body perform a very unique function in the body. They actually cause the effect that Trebor is talking about:

The eardrum can also serve to protect the inner ear from prolonged exposure to loud, low-pitch noises. When the brain receives a signal that indicates this sort of noise, a reflex occurs at the eardrum. The tensor tympani muscle and the stapedius muscle suddenly contract. This pulls the eardrum and the connected bones in two different directions, so the drum becomes more rigid. When this happens, the ear does not pick up as much noise at the low end of the audible spectrum, so the loud noise is dampened.

In addition to protecting the ear, this reflex helps you concentrate your hearing. It masks loud, low-pitch background noise so you can focus on higher-pitch sounds. Among other things, this helps you carry on a conversation when you're in a very noisy environment, like a rock concert. The reflex also kicks in whenever you start talking -- otherwise, the sound of your own voice would drown out a lot of the other sounds around you.
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