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We have noses to smell, eyes to see, and ears to hear, right?
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Well, actually, your ears are responsible for much more than just hearing.
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In fact, they can even help you taste.
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And that's all thanks to what's inside.
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We think of ears as these flappy appendages that stick out of our heads.
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But the most important structures are actually on the inside, and they're known as the inner and middle ear.
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Inside your middle ear is the nerve that moves the muscles of your face.
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Aka, the facial nerve.
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And if it becomes inflamed or injured, say, from a nasty ear infection, you can lose control of the muscles in your face.
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But it could actually get worse.
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Now, along that facial nerve there is a taste nerve.
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It's called chorda tympani.
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That's right, the nerve for taste runs right through your middle ear.
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And if that nerve gets damaged, you could alter or even lose your sense of taste permanently.
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By the way, not only are your ears incredibly important for tasting food, but what you're listening to can also change your food's flavor.
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For example, research has shown that white noise can dull saltiness but enhance crunchiness.
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And in one study, volunteers perceived a dish to be eggier when they listened to the sound of clucking chickens.
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But whether it's the sound of chickens or my beautiful voice, it all enters your ear through the cochlea, a shell-like structure in the inner ear.
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Inside the cochlea, there are over 16,000 hair-like cells, which take vibrations entering your ear and convert them into nerve impulses.
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Those impulses travel to your brain, which turns them into the sound you hear.
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So if it weren't for those cells, you'd be deaf.
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Which is why it's incredibly important that you keep them protected.
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Especially from menaces like bacteria, viruses, and even adventurous insects.
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And for that, your ears' best defense is earwax.
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Earwax is good.
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It is not bad to have earwax.
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That's right.
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You need that gross, golden wax.
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It not only has antibacterial properties, but it's also downright sticky, helping to stop invaders right in their tracks.
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But earwax isn't the only part of your inner ear that keeps you healthy.
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So, there is a tube made of muscle that connects the back of your nose and your ears.
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It's called the eustachian tube, and it helps equalize pressure between your ears and the atmosphere around you.
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Normally the tube is sealed off so nothing can travel between your ears and your throat, which keeps infections at bay.
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But when there's a change in pressure, like when you're taking off in an airplane, the air inside the tube expands.
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Which typically makes you want to pop your ears.
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And that's a good thing too, because popping your ears opens the tube and releases the air, balancing the pressure inside and out.
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Speaking of balance, there's one other incredibly important structure you can find inside your inner ear: the vestibular system.
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Kind of like a level, it controls your balance using a number of liquid-filled canals.
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Those balance canals are responsible for telling your body you are moving.
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Whether it may be moving left to right or your body's moving up and down.
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As you move around, fluid in the canals sloshes against millions of hair-like structures called stereocilia, and this sends a signal to the brain where you process it as movement.
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That's why infections like the common cold can sometimes make you feel dizzy.
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They often cause inflammation in the vestibular nerve, which distorts those signals.
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So the next time you find yourself walking without falling over, or tasting your food, or listening to, well, anything, think of your ears.
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Which, as it turns out, have a lot more going on inside than out.