Sound detector hope for the deaf

Miss-Delectable

New Member
Joined
Apr 18, 2004
Messages
17,160
Reaction score
7
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/li...ews.html?in_article_id=352875&in_page_id=1797

Super-sensitive sound detectors used by crickets to spot predators have been recreated in the laboratory.
Scientists hope studying the tiny artificial hairs might lead to the development of new cochlea implants for the deaf.

The sensors will also have a range of other research applications, such as measuring airflows over aircraft.

Crickets spend most of their lives on the ground, making them vulnerable to predators such as wasps and spiders.

Species like the wood cricket have developed a pair of hairy appendages on their abdomens called cerci which can detect the smallest fluctuations in air currents.

Each of the hairs is lodged in a socket. Air vibrations drag on the hair, rotating its base and triggering specific nerve cells. The nerve messages allow the cricket to pinpoint low-frequency sound from any direction with incredible sensitivity.

Physicists at the University of Twente in the Netherlands built their own version of the system with up to a few hundred artificial hairs, the Journal of Micromechanics and Microengineering reported.

The fine plastic hairs are attached to membranes with built-in electrodes and capacitors.

Airflow on the hair causes an electrical change which sends out a signal in a similar fashion to the cricket's cerci.

Hearing is made possible by tiny hairs disturbed by liquid in the cochlea of the inner ear. If the sensitive hairs are destroyed they cannot send out nerve messages in response to sound, and deafness results.
 
Ravensteve, you're going to have to wait a WICKED long time for the cure....there's too much profit in hearing loss for the big companies to give it up easily.......
 
I know what you mean, DeafDyke. :) It's just like having "colds".....there's too much profit having colds because without colds, people wouldn't be having pneumonia, brochitis, upper respiratory infections, and others....so no wonder they didn't have a cure for this yet.
 
And crickets are INSECTS....not even mammals!!!!! They probaly don't even hear like mammals!!!!
 
deafdyke said:
And crickets are INSECTS....not even mammals!!!!! They probaly don't even hear like mammals!!!!

True, isn't it true that the crickets hear through their legs?
 
Nesmuth.....it's true!!!!! Even a lot of testing on animals hasn't resulted in gains for human medicene!!!! It'll be a cold day in hell before they come up with a cure for hearing loss!
 
Personally, I think stem cell research yields the greatest hope to finding a solution to nerve deafness.
 
Back
Top