Question

Which of the following statements is true about the semicircular canals of the inner ear?

          Which of the following statements is true about the semicircular canals of the inner ear?
        
Which of the following statements is true about the semicircular canals of the inner ear?

Added by Gerald R.

Close

Biology for AP Courses
Biology for AP Courses
Julianne Zedalis, John Eggebrecht
AceChat toggle button
Close icon
Ace pointing down

Please give Ace some feedback

Your feedback will help us improve your experience

Thumb up icon Thumb down icon
Thanks for your feedback!
Profile picture
Which of the following statements is true about the semicircular canals of the inner ear? Which of the following statements is true about the semicircular canals of the inner ear?
Close icon
Play audio
Feedback
Powered by NumerAI
Jennifer Stoner Kathleen Carty
Ivan Kochetkov verified

Sri K and 91 other subject Biology educators are ready to help you.

Ask a new question

*

Labs

-

Want to see this concept in action?

NEW

Explore this concept interactively to see how it behaves as you change inputs.

View Labs

*

Key Concepts

-
Key Concept
Premium Feature
Explore the core concept behind this problem.
Play button
Key Concept
Premium Feature
Explore the core concept behind this problem.
Your browser does not support the video tag.

*

Recommended Videos

-
which-statement-is-true-regarding-the-ear-and-hearing-the-auditory-eustachian-tube-allows-passage-of-sound-waves-to-the-tympanic-membrane-the-ear-ossicles-are-connected-to-the-oval-window-th-53998

Sri K.

what-statement-is-true-movement-of-fluid-in-the-semicircular-canals-stimulate-the-movement-of-hair-cells-allowing-for-hearing-fluid-movement-in-the-cochlea-stimulates-the-movement-of-hair-ce-57211

what statement is true? movement of fluid in the semicircular canals stimulate the movement of hair cells allowing for hearing? Fluid movement in the cochlea stimulates the movement of hair cells allowing hearing? Eustachian tube connects middle ear to inner ear?

Sri K.

moving-your-head-forward-would-be-detected-by-which-of-the-following-structures-a-the-semicircular-2

Moving your head forward would be detected by which of the following structures? a. the semicircular canals b. the utricle and saccule c. the cochlea d. the auditory canal. e. None of these are correct.

Human Biology


*

Recommended Textbooks

-
Biology for AP Courses

Biology for AP Courses

Julianne Zedalis, John Eggebrecht
achievement 1,856 solutions
Objective Biology for NEET

Objective Biology for NEET

Rajiv Vijay 1st Edition
achievement 1,521 solutions
Introduction to General, Organic and Biochemistry

Introduction to General, Organic and Biochemistry

Frederick A. Bettelheim, William H. Brown, Mary K. Campbell 12th Edition
achievement 1,892 solutions

*

Transcript

-
00:01 Solution to the given question is following is the true statement true statement regarding the ear and hearing that is the ear occipers are connected to the oval window oval window next ear is the one organ which is including into sensory into…
Need help? Use Ace
Ace is your personal tutor. It breaks down any question with clear steps so you can learn.
Start Using Ace
Ace is your personal tutor for learning
Step-by-step explanations
Instant summaries
Summarize YouTube videos
Understand textbook images or PDFs
Study tools like quizzes and flashcards
Listen to your notes as a podcast
Continue solving this problem
Create a free account to:
  • View full step-by-step solution
  • Ask follow-up questions with Ace AI
  • Save progress and study later
Continue Free
Join the community

18,000,000+

Students on Numerade


Trusted by students at 8,000+ universities

Numerade

Get step-by-step video solution
from top educators

Continue with Clever
or



By creating an account, you agree to the Terms of Service and Privacy Policy
Already have an account? Log In

A free answer
just for you

Watch the video solution with this free unlock.

Numerade

Log in to watch this video
...and 100,000,000 more!


EMAIL

PASSWORD

OR
Continue with Clever