Thursday, June 19, 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

A 'surface' that controls fluids

A 'surface' that controls fluids
Defying gravitational forces, an Indian-origin scientist-led team has developed a new way of making surfaces that can actively control how fluids...

A 'surface' that controls fluids

Facebook Users Dial 911 Over Outage, Cops Frown

Facebook Users Dial 911 Over Outage, Cops Frown
Will you call 911 if Facebook goes off the radar? This is exactly some users in Los Angeles did when the popular social networking site Friday suffered its second brief outage in two months.

Facebook Users Dial 911 Over Outage, Cops Frown

Virtual friendship in, personal connect out

Virtual friendship in, personal connect out
Time was when Friendship Day meant hanging out with buddies and wearing colourful friendship bands. But now virtual connect through forwarded...

Virtual friendship in, personal connect out

Scientists turn mouse transparent

Scientists turn mouse transparent
In a major breakthrough, scientists have transformed a mouse into a "see-through" creature that can give them a clearer view of the body tissues for research....

Scientists turn mouse transparent

Xiaomi now world's fifth largest smartphone maker

Xiaomi now world's fifth largest smartphone maker
China's Xiaomi has become the fifth largest smartphone maker in the world. The Chinese company reached this milestone in just three years....

Xiaomi now world's fifth largest smartphone maker

US woman sues Facebook over 'revenge porn' images

US woman sues Facebook over 'revenge porn' images
A woman in the US has filed a $123 million case against social networking site Facebook for not deleting "revenge porn" images uploaded by her old friend....

US woman sues Facebook over 'revenge porn' images