Realistic mechanical tuning in a micromechanical cochlear model

Abstract
Two assumptions were made in the formulation of a recent cohlear model [P.J. Kolston, J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 83, 1481-1487 (1988)]: (1) The basilar membrane has two radial modes of vibration, corresponding to division into its arcuate and pectinate zones; and (2) the impedance of the outer hair cells (OHCs) greatly modifies the mechanis of the arcuate zone. Both of these assumptions are strongly supported by cochlear anatomy. This paper presents a revised version of the outer hair cell, arcuate-pectinate (OHCAP) model, which is an improvement over the original model in two important ways: First, a model for the OHCs is included so that the OHC impedance is no longer prescribed functionally; and, second, the presence of the OHCs enhances the basilar membrane motion, so that the model is now consistent with observed response changes resulting from trauma. The OHCAP model utilizes the unusual spatial arrangement of the OHCs, the Deiters cells, their phalangeal processes, and the pillars of Corti. The OHCs do not add energy to the cochlear partition and hence the OHCAP model is passive. In spite of the absence of active processes, the model exhibits mechanical tuning very similar to those measured by Sellick et al. [Hear. Res. 10, 93-100 (1983)] in the guinea pig cochlea and by Robles et al. [J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 80, 1364-1374(1986)] in the chinchilla cochlea. Therefore, it appears that mechnical response tuning and response changes resulting from trauma should not be used as justifications for the hypothesis of active processes in the real cochlea.

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