Overview
- Editors:
-
-
Arthur N. Popper
-
Department of Anatomy, Schools of Medicine and Dentistry, Georgetown University, USA
-
Richard R. Fay
-
Department of Psychology and Parmly Hearing Institute, Loyola University of Chicago, Chicago, USA
Access this book
Other ways to access
About this book
The past two decades have seen an extraordinary growth of interest in the auditory mechanisms of a wide range of vertebrates and invertebrates. Investigations have ranged from auditory mechanisms in relatively simple animals where just a few cells are em ployed for detection of sound, to the highly complex detection and processing systems of man and the other mammals. Of particular significance to us has been the growing interest in general principles of vertebrate auditory system organization, as opposed to a specific and limited concern for the mammalian or even human systems. Some of the interest in nonmammalian systems has risen from the desire to fmd simpler experi mental models for both the essential components (e. g. , the hair cell receptor) and the more complex functions (e. g. , frequency analysis) of all vertebrate auditory systems. Interest has also risen from questions about the evolution of hearing and the covariation (or lack of it) in structure and function in a wide variety of biological solutions to the problems of acoustic mechanoreception. Of course, the desire to fmd simpler experi mental models and the need to answer questions about the evolution of hearing are not unrelated. In fact, detailed analyses of a variety of systems have led several times to the realization that some of the "simple systems" are more complex than initially thought.
Similar content being viewed by others
Table of contents (16 papers)
-
-
Future View
-
Front Matter
Pages 437-437
-
-
Back Matter
Pages 453-457
Editors and Affiliations
-
Department of Anatomy, Schools of Medicine and Dentistry, Georgetown University, USA
Arthur N. Popper
-
Department of Psychology and Parmly Hearing Institute, Loyola University of Chicago, Chicago, USA
Richard R. Fay