Milazzo Mario, Fallah Elika, Carapezza Michael, Kumar Nina S, Lei Jason H, Olson Elizabeth S
The BioRobotics Institute, Scuola Superiore Sant' Anna, Viale R. Piaggio 34, 56025 Pontedera, Italy.
Department of Otolaryngology & Head and Neck Surgery, Department of Biomedical Engineering, Columbia University, 630 West 168th Street, P&S 11-452, New York, NY 10032, USA.
Hear Res. 2017 Mar;346:1-13. doi: 10.1016/j.heares.2017.01.007. Epub 2017 Jan 11.
The tympanic membrane (TM) has a key role in transmitting sounds to the inner ear, but a concise description of how the TM performs this function remains elusive. This paper probes TM operation by applying a free field click stimulus to the gerbil ear and exploring the consequent motions of the TM and umbo. Motions of the TM were measured both on radial tracks starting close to the umbo and on a grid distal and adjacent to the umbo. The experimental results confirmed the high fidelity of sound transmission from the ear canal to the umbo. A delay of 5-15 μs was seen in the onset of TM motion between points just adjacent to the umbo and mid-radial points. The TM responded with a ringing motion, with different locations possessing different primary ringing frequencies. A simple analytic model from the literature, treating the TM as a string, was used to explore the experimental results. The click-based experiments and analysis led to the following description of TM operation: A transient sound pressure on the TM causes a transient initial TM motion that is maximal ∼ at the TM's radial midpoints. Mechanical forces generated by this initial prominent TM distortion then pull the umbo inward, leading to a delayed umbo response. The initial TM deformation also gives rise to prolonged mechanical ringing on the TM that does not result in significant umbo motion, likely due to destructive interference from the range of ringing frequencies. Thus, the umbo's response is a high-fidelity representation of the transient stimulus. Because any sound can be considered as a consecutive series of clicks, this description is applicable to any sound stimulus.
鼓膜(TM)在将声音传递到内耳方面起着关键作用,但对于鼓膜如何执行此功能的简洁描述仍然难以捉摸。本文通过对沙鼠耳朵施加自由场点击刺激并探索鼓膜和鼓膜脐随后的运动来探究鼓膜的运作。在靠近鼓膜脐开始的径向轨迹上以及在鼓膜脐远端和相邻的网格上测量了鼓膜的运动。实验结果证实了从耳道到鼓膜脐的声音传输具有高保真度。在紧邻鼓膜脐的点和径向中点之间,鼓膜运动的起始出现了5 - 15微秒的延迟。鼓膜以振铃运动做出反应,不同位置具有不同的主要振铃频率。使用文献中的一个简单分析模型,将鼓膜视为一根弦,来探究实验结果。基于点击的实验和分析得出了对鼓膜运作的如下描述:鼓膜上的瞬态声压会导致鼓膜的瞬态初始运动,该运动在鼓膜的径向中点处最大。这种初始显著的鼓膜变形产生的机械力随后将鼓膜脐向内拉,导致鼓膜脐的延迟响应。鼓膜的初始变形还会在鼓膜上产生持续的机械振铃,但不会导致鼓膜脐产生明显运动,这可能是由于振铃频率范围内的相消干涉所致。因此,鼓膜脐的响应是瞬态刺激的高保真表示。由于任何声音都可以被视为一系列连续的点击,所以该描述适用于任何声音刺激。