Friday, 14 October 2011
Getting in tune
Scientists believe it is possible to tune the cochlea so that sound bypasses damaged areas of nerve.
The theoretic possibility of restoring hearing in a re-tuned cochlea is described by scientists from Switzerland and South Africa in a scientific journal. The idea is to let functioning parts of the cochlea take over the sound processing from damaged parts. Injury to the cochlea (nerve centre of the ear) is a common cause of hearing loss. The damage may be done by infections, medications, acoustic trauma and ageing. Whatever the cause, the resulting damage affects the ability to detect sounds in certain frequencies, such as the frequencies of human speech. The hearing loss appears as holes in the normal frequency range.
These holes may be closed by re-tuning healthy parts of the cochlea to make them able to receive and process sounds that would normally be processed by the damaged areas.
Friday, 7 October 2011
Did You Know?
£700 for a plastic ear? That is illogical, captain.
It may seem completely illogical, but fans of the smash television show Star Trek are expected to fork out hundreds of pounds for a single piece of memorabilia from the franchise.
For a false ear worn by key character Mr Spock in the first Star Trek feature film has come up for sale - and is expected to fetch a staggering £700.
The silicone latex auricle with its famous pointed end has been carefully preserved, and now Trekkies - as fans of the hit show are known - are queuing up to buy it.
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