Below is the labelled diagram of the inner ear:

Utriculus and Sacculus collectively termed as vestibule are responsible for maintaining static balance in human beings.
Chapter Overview: Sense Organs
Sense organs are specialised organs containing receptors that detect stimuli from the environment and convert them into nerve impulses. The five sense organs are the eye (sight), ear (hearing and balance), tongue (taste), nose (smell), and skin (touch, pressure, pain, temperature). For ICSE Class X, the eye and ear are the most important. The eye has three layers: sclera (with cornea), choroid (with iris), and retina (with rods and cones). Light enters through the cornea, passes through the pupil and lens, and forms a real, inverted image on the retina. The lens changes shape through accommodation (ciliary muscles adjust for near and distant vision). Major defects include myopia (corrected by concave lens), hypermetropia (corrected by convex lens), astigmatism (cylindrical lens), presbyopia (convex/bifocal lens), and cataracts (surgical). The ear has three regions: outer ear (pinna, ear canal), middle ear (eardrum, three ossicles — malleus, incus, stapes — and Eustachian tube), and inner ear (cochlea for hearing, semicircular canals for dynamic balance, vestibule for static balance). Sound waves are collected by the pinna, transmitted through the ossicles (amplified ~20x), converted to nerve impulses by hair cells in the cochlea, and sent via the auditory nerve to the brain. The tongue detects five basic tastes (sweet, sour, salty, bitter, umami) through taste buds. The nose detects odours through olfactory receptors. The skin detects touch, pressure, pain, heat, and cold through specialised receptors. This chapter typically carries 3–5 marks in board exams, with diagrams of the eye and ear being frequently asked.
Key Definitions & Concepts
| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
| Sense Organ | A specialised organ containing receptors that detect specific stimuli and convert them into nerve impulses |
| Receptor | A cell or group of cells sensitive to a specific type of stimulus (e.g., photoreceptors detect light) |
| Accommodation | The ability of the eye to change the focal length of the lens to focus on objects at different distances |
| Pupil Reflex | Involuntary adjustment of pupil size in response to light intensity (constricts in bright light, dilates in dim light) |
| Myopia | Short-sightedness; distant objects appear blurred because image forms in front of the retina; corrected by concave lens |
| Hypermetropia | Long-sightedness; near objects appear blurred because image forms behind the retina; corrected by convex lens |
| Presbyopia | Age-related long-sightedness due to loss of elasticity of the lens; corrected by convex or bifocal lenses |
| Cataract | Clouding (opacity) of the lens due to protein clumping; corrected by surgical removal and artificial lens implant |
| Tympanic Membrane | The eardrum; a thin membrane that vibrates when struck by sound waves, converting sound energy to mechanical vibrations |
| Cochlea | Snail-shaped, fluid-filled structure in the inner ear containing the organ of Corti; converts vibrations to nerve impulses (hearing) |
| Organ of Corti | Structure inside the cochlea containing hair cells (auditory receptors) that act as transducers for hearing |
| Semicircular Canals | Three fluid-filled loops in the inner ear arranged at right angles; detect rotational movement and maintain dynamic balance |
| Eustachian Tube | Tube connecting the middle ear to the pharynx; equalises air pressure on both sides of the eardrum |
Must-Know Concepts
- The cornea performs approximately 70% of light refraction; the lens performs fine focusing (accommodation)
- Rods = dim light, black & white, rhodopsin, periphery of retina. Cones = bright light, colour, iodopsin, fovea
- Accommodation for near vision: ciliary muscles contract → suspensory ligaments slacken → lens becomes thick (more convex)
- Accommodation for distant vision: ciliary muscles relax → suspensory ligaments tighten → lens becomes thin (flatter)
- Myopia = image in front of retina = concave lens correction. Hypermetropia = image behind retina = convex lens correction
- Three ossicles in order: Malleus (hammer) → Incus (anvil) → Stapes (stirrup) — mnemonic: MIS
- Ossicles amplify vibrations approximately 20 times from eardrum to oval window
- Cochlea = hearing (hair cells in organ of Corti). Semicircular canals = rotational balance. Vestibule = static balance
- Ear has dual function: hearing AND balance
- Five basic tastes: sweet, sour, salty, bitter, umami. Substances must dissolve in saliva to be tasted
- Olfactory receptors detect airborne chemicals dissolved in nasal mucus
- Skin receptors: Meissner's (touch), Pacinian (pressure), free nerve endings (pain), Ruffini (heat), Krause's (cold)
Rods vs Cones
| Feature | Rods | Cones |
|---|---|---|
| Shape | Rod-shaped (cylindrical) | Cone-shaped (flask-shaped) |
| Pigment | Rhodopsin (visual purple) | Iodopsin |
| Type of vision | Dim light (scotopic) | Bright light (photopic) |
| Colour vision | No (black & white only) | Yes (red, green, blue) |
| Distribution | Periphery of retina | Concentrated at fovea (yellow spot) |
| Number | ~120 million | ~6 million |
Myopia vs Hypermetropia
| Feature | Myopia | Hypermetropia |
|---|---|---|
| Common name | Short-sightedness | Long-sightedness |
| Clear vision for | Near objects only | Distant objects only |
| Cause | Eyeball too long / lens too convex | Eyeball too short / lens too flat |
| Image falls | In front of retina | Behind retina |
| Corrected by | Concave (diverging) lens | Convex (converging) lens |
Three Regions of the Ear
| Feature | Outer Ear | Middle Ear | Inner Ear |
|---|---|---|---|
| Parts | Pinna, ear canal | Eardrum, ossicles (malleus, incus, stapes), Eustachian tube | Cochlea, semicircular canals, vestibule |
| Medium | Air | Air | Fluid (endolymph, perilymph) |
| Function | Collects and directs sound | Amplifies and transmits vibrations | Hearing (cochlea) and balance (semicircular canals, vestibule) |
Board Exam Tips
- Diagram of the eye is asked almost every year — practice drawing and labelling with at least 10 labels
- For defects of vision, always draw ray diagrams showing where the image falls AND the correcting lens
- Rods vs Cones comparison is a very common question — prepare at least 5 points
- For the ear, learn the hearing pathway as a numbered sequence of steps
- Remember: ear = hearing + balance (students often forget the balance function)
- Ossicles order: MIS (Malleus, Incus, Stapes) — this is frequently tested
- This chapter carries 3–5 marks but overlaps with the Nervous System chapter (reflex arcs, nerve impulses)
Quick-Revision Mnemonics
| Mnemonic | Helps Remember |
|---|---|
| Cones = Colour | Cones are for colour vision; rods are for dim light |
| MIS | Ossicle order: Malleus → Incus → Stapes |
| MYopia = MInus lens | Myopia corrected by concave (minus/diverging) lens |
| Near = Contract = Convex | Near vision: ciliary muscles contract, lens becomes more convex |