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Nonlinear mechanics at the apex of the guinea-pig cochlea
- Source :
- Hearing research. 82(2)
- Publication Year :
- 1995
-
Abstract
- A heterodyne laser interferometer was used to observe the sound-evoked displacement patterns of Reissner's membrane and various other structures in the apical turn of the guinea-pig cochlea. Most structures (including the basilar membrane) were similarly tuned, and had best frequencies in the 200-350Hz range. A distinct notch was usually observed approximately 0.7 octaves above the best frequency, and amplitude- and phase-plateaus were observed at higher frequencies. In most other respects, however, the mechanical tuning resembled the frequency-threshold curves of low frequency cochlear nerve fibers. In five reasonably intact, in vivo preparations, the frequency of the mechanical sensitivity notch was intensity-dependent: Compressive nonlinearities were observed above approximately 80 dB SPL on the low-frequency side of the notch, with antagonistically expansive nonlinearities on the high-frequency side. Two-tone suppression was observed in one of these preparations. Stimulus-related baseline position shifts were observed in another in vivo preparation. No such nonlinearities were observed in structurally damaged and/or1 hour post-mortem preparations. However, more robust nonlinearities were observed in all preparations at higher levels of stimulation (e.g.100-110 dB SPL). These high-level nonlinearities diminished only slowly after death, and gave rise to various effects, including time-dependent (i.e. adapting) and severely distorted (e.g. peak-split and/or dc-shifted) responses.
- Subjects :
- Heterodyne
Guinea Pigs
Low frequency
Optics
Nerve Fibers
medicine
Animals
Inner ear
Cochlea
business.industry
Chemistry
Cochlear nerve
Auditory Threshold
Cochlear Duct
Vestibulocochlear Nerve
Sensory Systems
Basilar Membrane
Intensity (physics)
Electrophysiology
Basilar membrane
Amplitude
medicine.anatomical_structure
Acoustic Stimulation
Biophysics
business
Spiral Ganglion
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 03785955
- Volume :
- 82
- Issue :
- 2
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Hearing research
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....50be49c011b3f5669327c3a6571d6a23