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The Sound Learning Centre - Heading - "Helping children and adults with learning and sensory difficulties improve their performance"

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You are here: Home / Intro / What's behind it / Balance / Vestibular

What's behind it

Balance / Vestibular

“So divinely is the world organised that every one of us, in our place and time, is in balance with everything else”
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

There are five generally accepted senses that we become aware of at an early age: hearing, vision, touch, smell and taste. There are, however, other equally important sensory systems that are essential for normal functioning. Through our work we have found that the vestibular system (also known as the balance mechanism) can be critical to proper development from birth onwards.

The vestibular and auditory senses are both part of the same organ – the inner ear. The receptors for both are located in a convoluted chamber, the bony labyrinth, within which a delicate continuous membrane is suspended, forming a second chamber, the membranous labyrinth. This entire fluid-filled structure is called the inner ear.

Cross-section picture of the earThe inner ear is connected to the air-filled middle ear by a plate, the plate of the stapes, which vibrates in response to vibrations of the eardrum, setting the fluid of the inner ear moving back and forth. All of the inner ear organs branch off from a large central area within the inner ear, the vestibule – on one side are the hearing transducers (cochlea), on the other the vestibular semicircular canals, while two other organs, the utricle and saccule, measure horizontal and vertical acceleration.

The purpose of the vestibular system is to check the position and motion of our head in space. There are two components, one detecting rotation through the three semicircular canals, the other detecting motion along a line through the utricle and saccule organs.

Cross-section picture of the inner earWe must remember that all these parts, the hearing and vestibular systems, are all located inside the same membrane, in the same fluid, using very similar ways to detect motion through the movement of hair cells. No wonder that auditory input directly influences the vestibular system.

An important role of the vestibular system is to keep our eyes still in space while our head moves. The vestibular system exerts direct control over the eyes through three pairs of muscles. The direction of these eye muscles is exactly in line with the direction of the three semicircular canals, so that in general a single canal controls a single pair of eye muscles.

Head and eye movement diagramDirectly or indirectly, the vestibular system influences nearly everything we do. It is the unifying system in our brain that modifies and coordinates information received from other systems and has a great impact on our behaviour.

Under-sensitivity of the vestibular system often results in ‘clumsiness’, excessive stumbling and falling over and bumping into things, but also in the need to move all the time. Those children can be very good at football or ballet, but find it very hard to stand still, be quiet or concentrate. It can also influence their ability to read and write. Over-sensitivity of the vestibular system will result in an over-cautious approach to any movement, avoidance of PE lessons and sports, travel sickness, etc. Life will often be very stressful for those children.

In our work we find that many people with Dyslexia and specific learning difficulties display a difficulty in coordinated movement of the eyes related to a vestibular dysfunction. This leads to reading and writing problems as the eyes will tend to jump rather than smoothly track across a page.

The close interrelationship between the vestibular system and the ears and eyes is the reason why it is possible to retrain this system by influencing it through the auditory and visual senses, using sound and light.


Explore further

Other areas on this website to explore in relation to the vestibular system are:

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What you see – Balance / Vestibular

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What's behind it – Proprioception

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How we help – Assessments

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How we help – Sound therapy

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How we help – Light therapy

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How we help – Developmental

You will find guidance on what to do next in the Next steps section.

We offer a confidential, no obligation, free telephone consultation – simply call us on 020 – 8882 1060.


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