Inc. (NASDAQ: COCH), a small-cap medical device company with a market capitalization of $29.4 million specializing in hearing loss solutions, has announced the expansion of its patent portfolio with ...
Sterling High School students are using a tool of technology to peel back the layers of the human body for an up close and intimate view of human anatomy. An anatomage table is an interactive virtual ...
Do your ears hang low, do they wiggle to and fro? In the latter case, that’s thanks to a so-called “neural fossil”.
A mechanism that activates specific muscles in our ears is a leftover from our evolutionary past, back when our ancestors depended more on their hearing for survival.
Muscles only believed to be used to wiggle our ears actually enable people to listen more intently, reveals new research.
These auricular muscles helped change the shape of the pinna, or the shell of the ear, funneling sound to the ... merely as a reflex but potentially as part of an attentional effort mechanism ...
Summary: Humans have vestigial ear muscles that once helped our ancestors focus on sounds ... This suggests that these muscles are engaged not merely as a reflex but potentially as part of an ...
The February session of Healthy U will be presented by Dr. Rick Rinehart. This session will be on Tuesday, Feb. 25 at noon in ...
Causes include tinnitus, dysfunction of tissues in the ear, and high blood pressure. This article will discuss the possible causes, symptoms, and treatments associated with fluttering in the ear.