Instructional Video5:32
SciShow

Could a Shirt Hear Your Heartbeat? | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Microphones keep getting smaller and smaller, but have you ever asked what it would be like to have a bigger one in the form of a shirt? And though we tend to incorrectly think that we’re having two-way conversations with our pets, we...
Instructional Video2:08
SciShow

What Makes Your Ears Ring?

12th - Higher Ed
What's happening inside our ears when we can hear that ringing? What's happening inside our brains? Sit back, clean the wax out of your ears, and let Michael Aranda explain! ----------
Instructional Video3:08
SciShow

What a Cochlear Implant Actually Sounds Like

12th - Higher Ed
If you're not hearing impaired, you may wonder what it's like to wear a cochlear implant—what does it actually sound like? Unlike what you may think, cochlear implants don't generate sound like a hearing aid would. Instead, they actually...
Instructional Video5:33
SciShow

Could a Shirt Hear Your Heartbeat? | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Microphones keep getting smaller and smaller, but have you ever asked what it would be like to have a bigger one in the form of a shirt? And though we tend to incorrectly think that we’re having two-way conversations with our pets, we...
Instructional Video3:30
SciShow

What Does A Cochlear Implant Sound Like?

12th - Higher Ed
Cochlear implants don't generate sound like a hearing aid would. Instead, they zap your cochlea.
Instructional Video15:42
TED Talks

Jim Hudspeth: The beautiful, mysterious science of how you hear

12th - Higher Ed
Have you ever wondered how your ears work? In this delightful and fascinating talk, biophysicist Jim Hudspeth demonstrates the wonderfully simple yet astonishingly powerful mechanics of hair cells, the microscopic powerhouses that make...
Instructional Video5:18
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: What's that ringing in your ears? | Marc Fagelson

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Tinnitus has been bothering humanity since Ancient Babylon, plaguing everyone from Leonardo da Vinci to Charles Darwin. Today, roughly one in seven people worldwide experiences this auditory sensation. So what exactly is tinnitus, and...
Instructional Video2:12
SciShow

What Makes Your Ears Ring?

12th - Higher Ed
What's happening inside our ears when we can hear that ringing? What's happening inside our brains? Sit back, clean the wax out of your ears, and let Michael Aranda explain!
Instructional Video4:51
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Can loud music damage your hearing? | Heather Malyuk

Pre-K - Higher Ed
After a concert, you find it difficult to hear your friend rave about the show. It sounds like they're speaking from across the room, and it's tough to make out their voice over the ringing in your ears. But, by the next morning, the...
Instructional Video12:01
SciShow

All This Noise Is KILLING Me!

12th - Higher Ed
The sounds we hear every day really do have effects on our health. Not just our ears, but our hearts and even our brains.
Instructional Video2:49
Curated Video

How We Hear

6th - 12th
How our ears hear different frequencies, and how they work with the brain to turn these into sounds which we understand. Biology - Being Human - Learning Points. Sounds are simply movements of air molecules. Our ears are extremely...
Instructional Video0:55
Curated Video

How do we hear? – Odd one out

K - 5th
Four different parts of the body are shown, but which is the odd one out? Physical processes - Sound - How do we hear? A Twig Tidbit Film - Odd one out. The children have to work out which of four images is the odd one out.
Instructional Video2:45
Curated Video

Journey through the ear

K - 5th
Journey through an ear to discover how we hear sound... Physical processes - Sound - How do we hear? Learning Points The eardrum transmits vibrations to the ossicles. The cochlea sends signals to the auditory nerve. The auditory nerve...
Instructional Video2:09
Curated Video

The Hearing Song: How Hearing Works - it’s CRAZY!

Higher Ed
Are you curious about how hearing works? From the sound waves entering to the tympanic membrane vibrating, to the malleus, incus, and stapes doing their job, all the way to what happens in the cochlea and brain - this song captures it...
Instructional Video4:00
Wonderscape

Understanding How We Perceive Sound

K - 5th
Delve into the fascinating process of hearing and how our ears transform sound waves into signals for our brains to interpret. Learn about the intricate anatomy of the ear and how it enables us to experience the richness of sound. Sound...
Instructional Video3:12
Curated Video

Explore The 5 Senses!

Pre-K - 8th
Let's learn about the 5 senses!
Instructional Video8:34
Wonderscape

Decoding Sound: How Our Ears and Brain Interpret Beach Waves

K - 5th
Explore the process of hearing, from the collection of sound waves by our ears to the interpretation by our brain. The video discusses the ear's structure, including the outer, middle, and inner ear components like the cochlea and...
Instructional Video3:49
Curated Video

Neuroplasticity

12th - Higher Ed
Duke University neuroscientist Jennifer Groh discusses the vital feature of “neuroplasticity” that accounts for how our brains are continually adapting to the world around us, highlighting how the hearing impaired develop the use of a...
Instructional Video4:19
FuseSchool

Sound Waves In Action

6th - Higher Ed
Sound Waves In Action | Waves | Physics | FuseSchool Did you know that birdsong is a disturbance? In this video we will look at how sound waves travel and see them in action: how a Ruben’s tube shows sound waves and how the human ear...
Instructional Video2:41
TMW Media

Cochlear Implants: Determining if a cochlear implant is needed

K - 5th
Is it difficult for babies with hearing loss to communicate and learn? How can people tell if babies can't hear? What is a cochlear implant? Cochlear Implants, Part 1
Instructional Video3:15
TMW Media

Cochlear Implants: The process behind cochlear implant surgery

K - 5th
Is it a difficult surgery? How many children in America can hear because of the implant? Cochlear Implants, Part 2
Instructional Video5:00
Curated Video

Protecting and Maintaining Your Hearing

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In this video, the speaker conducts a tone quiz to test the viewer's hearing ability. They explain that as people age, they may experience age-related hearing loss, which is a normal and gradual process. The video emphasizes the...
Instructional Video5:51
Bizarre Beasts

The Two-Legged Reptile That Hears With Its Skin

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Lizards are reptiles with four legs...usually. Reptiles without legs are snakes...a lot of the time. And amphisbaenians mostly don't have legs, except when they do...but they're definitely not snakes.
Instructional Video2:59
The Noted Anatomist

Cranial nerve VIII

Higher Ed
This is a short tutorial on the vestibulocochlear nerve.