![Professor David Corey of Harvard Medical School led the research team that identified a protein key to human hearing.](https://npr.brightspotcdn.com/dims4/default/220b5d0/2147483647/strip/true/crop/200x150+0+0/resize/880x660!/quality/90/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fmedia.npr.org%2Fprograms%2Fatc%2Ffeatures%2F2004%2Foct%2Fhearing%2Fcorey200-e79ce4e29a8dfad25cca712db43b2a138d70dce3.jpg)
Richard Knox, NPR /
Scientists at Harvard Medical School and elsewhere have found the long-sought protein that transforms sound waves into nerve impulses. As NPR's Richard Knox reports, researchers are learning that hearing is the "fastest" of the senses -- faster even than vision in the way that the newly discovered protein transforms input into nerve signals.
Our sense of hearing needs to be fast -- not only to warn us of danger and the direction it's coming from, but also to enable us to perceive the incredible density of information --- tone, pitch, volume and the rapidly changing stream of vowels and consonants -- in speech.
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