de Boer E, Nuttall A L
Academic Medical Center, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
J Acoust Soc Am. 1997 Jun;101(6):3583-92. doi: 10.1121/1.418319.
The purpose of this investigation is to present evidence from experimental as well as model results on temporal variations of the frequency of oscillation in the basilar membrane's impulse response. Stimuli were either clicks leading to a direct estimate of the impulse response, or bands of pseudo-random noise (one or two octaves wide) which lead to an indirect estimate of the impulse response via a cross-correlation procedure. The noise bands were centered at the best frequency of the BM location under observation. Responses were obtained from the basal turn of the guinea-pig cochlea, from a location with a best frequency (for the weakest stimuli) between 17.0 and 18.5 kHz. Data acquisition was done with a sample frequency of 208 kHz. Input-output cross-correlation functions were found to share with impulse responses the property that the initial oscillations have a noticeably lower frequency than the later ones. During the impulse response the frequency of oscillation increases gradually. This increase occurs and continues to beyond the time that the oscillations reach the largest amplitude. This frequency variation is called a "glide." Using the "analytic signal" method the frequency of oscillation is found to increase continually throughout the duration of the main lobe of oscillation, even at the lowest tested stimulus intensities (about 20 dB SPL). At high stimulus intensity both the direct and indirect impulse response change their appearance drastically but the glide retains its basic form. In the case of the direct impulse response estimate the glide can be attributed to temporal variation of the degree of nonlinearity. For the indirect impulse response this is not true, because with a constant level noise stimulus there is no regular temporal variation of nonlinearity. In this case the glide should be interpreted as an intrinsic property of the cochlear system. From our and others' data the glide was found to exist over a topographic frequency range of best frequencies of at least from 1.76 to 18 kHz. Two examples of present-day models of the cochlea are discussed of which one is found to demonstrate the glide phenomenon in its response, and the other one does not.
本研究的目的是展示来自实验以及模型结果的证据,这些证据涉及基底膜冲动响应中振荡频率的时间变化。刺激信号要么是咔嗒声,可直接估计冲动响应,要么是伪随机噪声带(一个或两个倍频程宽),通过互相关程序间接估计冲动响应。噪声带以观察到的基底膜位置的最佳频率为中心。响应是从豚鼠耳蜗的基部转弯处获得的,该位置的最佳频率(对于最弱刺激)在17.0至18.5千赫兹之间。数据采集的采样频率为208千赫兹。发现输入 - 输出互相关函数与冲动响应具有相同的特性,即初始振荡的频率明显低于后期振荡。在冲动响应期间,振荡频率逐渐增加。这种增加在振荡达到最大振幅的时间之后仍会发生并持续。这种频率变化被称为“滑动”。使用“解析信号”方法发现,即使在最低测试刺激强度(约20分贝声压级)下,振荡频率在振荡主瓣的持续时间内也会持续增加。在高刺激强度下,直接和间接冲动响应的外观都会发生剧烈变化,但滑动仍保留其基本形式。在直接冲动响应估计的情况下,滑动可归因于非线性程度的时间变化。对于间接冲动响应则并非如此,因为在恒定水平噪声刺激下,非线性没有规则的时间变化。在这种情况下,滑动应被解释为耳蜗系统的固有特性。从我们和其他人的数据中发现,滑动存在于最佳频率至少从1.76至18千赫兹的地形频率范围内。讨论了两个当代耳蜗模型的例子,其中一个在其响应中表现出滑动现象,另一个则没有。