Tuesday, December 16, 2025
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

Men! New dating app strictly by invitation only

Men! New dating app strictly by invitation only
For all the men out there vying for female attention online, the going may get tougher with a new app.

Men! New dating app strictly by invitation only

Laser to strike down drones soon a reality

Laser to strike down drones soon a reality
It's ben imagined for long by sci-fi novelists and gamers and is now a reality. The US military is developing a laser weapon to shoot down enemy drones or unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs).

Laser to strike down drones soon a reality

Dress that bares all as your online activity increases!

Dress that bares all as your online activity increases!
You have to be careful before liking a picture on Facebook or sending a tweet while you are wearing this dress. Scientists at New York University have designed a dress that gradually turns transparent as the wearer's online activity increases.

Dress that bares all as your online activity increases!

Internet not behind newspapers' death: Study

Internet not behind newspapers' death: Study
You must have heard - and might be believing by now - that internet sounded the death knell for newspapers. But that may not be true.

Internet not behind newspapers' death: Study

Soon, iphone earplugs won't fit in any other device

Soon, iphone earplugs won't fit in any other device
You will not be able to use your iPhone earplugs with other devices in the near future.

Soon, iphone earplugs won't fit in any other device

Facebook most preferred social networking medium for urban teens'

Facebook most preferred social networking medium for urban teens'
Despite a drop in the percentage, Facebook continues to be the preferred social networking playground for teenagers in India's metros and other big cities, according to a survey.

Facebook most preferred social networking medium for urban teens'