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- Title
A differentially amplified motion in the ear for near-threshold sound detection.
- Authors
Fangyi Chen; Zha, Dingjun; Fridberger, Anders; Jiefu Zheng; Choudhury, Niloy; Jacques, Steven L.; Wang, Ruikang K.; Xiaorui Shi; Nuttall, Alfred L.
- Abstract
The ear is a remarkably sensitive pressure fluctuation detector. In guinea pigs, behavioral measurements indicate a minimum detectable sound pressure of ∼20 μPa at 16 kHz. Such faint sounds produce 0.1-nm basilar membrane displacements, a distance smaller than conformational transitions in ion channels. It seems that noise within the auditory system would swamp such tiny motions, making weak sounds imperceptible. Here we propose a new mechanism contributing to a resolution of this problem and validate it through direct measurement. We hypothesized that vibration at the apical side of hair cells is enhanced compared with that at the commonly measured basilar membrane side. Using in vivo optical coherence tomography, we demonstrated that apical-side vibrations peaked at a higher frequency, had different timing and were enhanced compared with those at the basilar membrane. These effects depend nonlinearly on the stimulus sound pressure level. The timing difference and enhancement of vibrations are important for explaining how the noise problem is circumvented.
- Publication
Nature Neuroscience, 2011, Vol 14, Issue 6, p770
- ISSN
1097-6256
- Publication type
Academic Journal
- DOI
10.1038/nn.2827