Keidel W D
Institut für Physiologie und Biokybernetik, Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, FRG.
Naturwissenschaften. 1992 Jul;79(7):300-10. doi: 10.1007/BF01138707.
For the last century hearing has been considered a purely passive process. G. S. Ohm's and H. v. Helmholtz's resonance theory of hearing was widely accepted until Wien's fundamental objection led to G. v. Békésy's and O. F. Ranke's travelling wave theory, the hydrodynamics of the inner ear that distributes the frequencies along the basilar membrane, which acts as the "first filter". Seebeck, Licklider, Schouten, and deBoer emphasized also the time domain and developed the concept of periodicity hearing and the "residue phenomenon". However, it was not until the concept of the "cochlear amplifier" and "active hearing" with energy generation during the transduction process within the ear itself was introduced that the "second filter" could be understood. Kemp's echo was the key to this revolutionary step in the theory of hearing.