Allen J B
J Acoust Soc Am. 1980 Dec;68(6):1660-70. doi: 10.1121/1.385198.
One of the basic questions which has persisted in the field of hearing theory is the still unresolved mechanical action of hair-cell transduction. The fundamental problem that has historically plagued researches is the discrepancy between mechanically measured tuning of basilar membrane motion and neurally measured tuning. In this paper we show that the difference between these two measures appears to be accounted for by a specific, physically motivated, micromechanical model. This model gives rise to a spectral zero which we identify as the "second-filter" of cochlear transduction. For high-frequency fibers this zero resides at a fixed frequency ratio below CF (characteristic frequency) while for fibers having low-frequency CF's the zero appears to go to zero frequency faster than CF. In this paper we first present and analyze the assumed mechanical model. We then briefly discuss a possible specific physical realization for the nonlinearity of cochlea mechanics. The nonlinear model is based on dynamical variations in outer hair cell stereocilia stiffness.
听觉理论领域一直存在的基本问题之一,是毛细胞转导的机械作用仍未得到解决。历史上困扰研究人员的根本问题,是基底膜运动的机械测量调谐与神经测量调谐之间的差异。在本文中,我们表明这两种测量之间的差异似乎可以由一个特定的、基于物理原理的微机械模型来解释。这个模型产生了一个频谱零点,我们将其识别为耳蜗转导的“第二滤波器”。对于高频纤维,这个零点位于低于CF(特征频率)的固定频率比处,而对于具有低频CF的纤维,该零点似乎比CF更快地趋近于零频率。在本文中,我们首先提出并分析假设的机械模型。然后,我们简要讨论耳蜗力学非线性的一种可能的具体物理实现。非线性模型基于外毛细胞静纤毛刚度的动态变化。