Cochlear power flux as an indicator of mechanical activity
- 1 September 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Acoustical Society of America (ASA) in The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
- Vol. 82 (3), 917-926
- https://doi.org/10.1121/1.395290
Abstract
The question of whether one can conclude just from basilar membrane (BM) vibration data that the cochlea is an active mechanical system is addressed. To this end, a method is developed which computes the power flux through a channel cross section of a short‐wave cochlear model from a given BM vibration pattern. The power flux is an important indicator of mechanical activity because a rise in this function corresponds to creation of mechanical energy. The power flux method is applied to BM velocity patterns as measured by Johnstone and Yates [J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 5 5, 584–587 (1974)] and by Sellick e t a l. [Hear. Res. 1 0, 101–108 (1983)] in the guinea pig and by Robles e t a l. [P e r i p h e r a l A u d i t o r y M e c h a n i s m s, edited by J. B. Allen, J. L. Hall, A. E. Hubbard, S. T. Neely, and A. Tubis (Springer, New York, 1986a), pp. 121–128, and J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 8 0, 1364–1374 (1986b)] in the chinchilla. Before the calculations are performed, the BM data are interpolated and smoothed in order to avoid numerical errors as a result of too few and noisy data points. The choice of the smoothing method influences the computed power flux function considerably. Nevertheless, the calculations appear to make a clear distinction between the ‘‘old’’ data, showing broad BM tuning (Johnstone and Yates, 1974), and the ‘‘new’’ data, in which the response is much more peaked (Sellick e t a l., 1983; Robles e t a l., 1986a,b). The former do not give rise to a significant increase of the power flux; the latter do, although less convincingly for the Sellick e t a l. (1983) data than for the Robles e t a l. (1986a,b) data. It is thus concluded that the recently obtained, sharply tuned BM responses reflect the presence of mechanical activity in the cochlea.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Quantitative validation of cochlear models using the Liouville-Green approximationHearing Research, 1986
- Comparison of WKB and finite difference calculations for a two-dimensional cochlear modelThe Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1979
- A model describing nonlinearities in hearing by active processes with saturation at 40 dBBiological Cybernetics, 1979
- Middle-Ear Characteristics of Anesthetized CatsThe Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1967