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Inner Ear Physiology
1
Inner Ear Physiology
2
Inner Ear Physiology
• Transduction
• Tympanic membrane
• Acoustical/mechanical
• Oval window
• Mechanical/hydraulic
• Basilar & tectorial membrane
• Hydraulic/mechanical
• Hair Cells (stereocilia)
• Mechanical/electric
• Hair Cells (base)
• Electrical/chemical
• Auditory Neuron
• Chemical/electrical
3
Block diagram of the cochlea
4
Frontal view of unrolled cochlea
5
Effect of stapes insertion in
cochlea
6
Effect of outward motion of
stapes.
7
Effect of outward movement of
stapes
8
9
Theories of Hearing
• Place Coding Theories
• Resonance theory
(Helmholtz, 1885)
• Traveling wave theory
(Georg von Bekesy 1928-1958- Nobel Prize 1961)
• Many other theories including standing wave theory,
pressure pattern theory, frequency analytic theory, etc.
See Zemlin for details.
• Temporal Coding Theories
• Telephone theory (Rutherford, 1886)
• Volley theory (Wever, 1949)
10
Place Theory: Impedance characteristics
of the basilar membrane
Resistance
Mass
reactance
Stiffness
reactance
• Apical end is 5x
wider and 100x
more flaccid than
basal end.
11
Resonance Theory
The BM acts as a series of filters or tuned rods (analogy of
piano strings). It performs a frequency analysis (Fourier
Analysis) of the incoming signal.
12
Traveling Wave Theory
• Most popular TW theory developed by
Bekesy (1928-1958).
• Used cochlear models and direct
observation of cochlea.
13
Traveling wave
14
Traveling wave for complex
tones
Basilar Membrane Traveling Wave
8 kHz + 2 kHz
16 kHz + 2 kHz + 1 kHz
16 kHz + 8 kHz + 4 kHz + 2 kHz
15
Traveling wave and nonlinearities
16
Traveling wave and upward
spread of masking
• Excitation patterns and can
be used to represent traveling
wave.
• Notice that low frequencies
can mask high frequencies
(e.g., 1000 masking 2000 Hz)
better than the high
frequencies mask lows (e.g.,
1000 masking 500 Hz).
17
Telephone Theory
• Problem is that the absolute refractory period is about 1
msec.
• That is, a hair cell can fire only once per millisecond (1000 times
per second or 1000 Hz).
• Therefore, it would not be possible to transmit sounds to the CNS
greater than 1000 Hz.
• Another problem is that damage to certain parts of the
basilar membrane (basal end) helps confirm a place theory.
18
Volley Theory
• Modification of
Telephone theory.
• Receptor cells fire in
groups: first one,
then another, then a
third
• Resetting: the first
group of cells to fire
are resetting while the
second and third
groups fire and so on
19
Combining Place and Volley Theories
Frequencies
< 300, 400 Hz
Mid Frequencies
> 4000, 5000 Hz
Predominate Comments
Theory
Volley
The traveling wave is too
broad to allow for specificity.
Both theories
apply
Traveling
Temporal coding not
Wave
supported in high frequencies
20
Electrical potential of the cochlea
21
22
Role of Hair Cells on Hearing Thresholds
• Normal behavioral thresholds are due to
amplification of motion by OHCs
• Slight to moderate hearing loss is due to a
breakdown of OHCs, and not IHCs
• Severe hearing loss is due to the breakdown
of OHCs and IHCs
23
Nerve Cell Anatomy
Synapses
Soma
Terminal
Boutons
Axon & Myelin
Dendrites
Neurotransmitter
Auditory Neurons are Bipolar
25
Block diagram of auditory neuron
26
Sensitivity (Detection) vs. Specificity (Identification)
Afferent Innervation of Inner and Outer Hair Cells
Specificity: Many-to-one arrangement
Nerve
Fiber
IHC
Sensitivity: One-to-many arrangement
Nerve
Fiber
OHC
Innervation
28
Summary
29