Light-induced vibration in the hearing organ

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作者
Tianying Ren
Wenxuan He
Yizeng Li
Karl Grosh
Anders Fridberger
机构
[1] Oregon Hearing Research Center,Department of Otolaryngology
[2] Oregon Health & Science University,Department of Mechanical Engineering
[3] University of Michigan,Department of Biomedical Engineering
[4] University of Michigan,Department of Clinical and Experimental Medicine
[5] Linköping University,Department of Clinical Science
[6] Center for Hearing and Communication Research,undefined
[7] Intervention and Technology,undefined
[8] Karolinska Institutet,undefined
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The exceptional sensitivity of mammalian hearing organs is attributed to an active process, where force produced by sensory cells boost sound-induced vibrations, making soft sounds audible. This process is thought to be local, with each section of the hearing organ capable of amplifying sound-evoked movement and nearly instantaneous, since amplification can work for sounds at frequencies up to 100 kHz in some species. To test these fundamental precepts, we developed a method for focally stimulating the living hearing organ with light. Light pulses caused intense and highly damped mechanical responses followed by traveling waves that developed with considerable delay. The delayed response was identical to movements evoked by click-like sounds. This shows that the active process is neither local nor instantaneous, but requires mechanical waves traveling from the cochlear base toward its apex. A physiologically-based mathematical model shows that such waves engage the active process, enhancing hearing sensitivity.
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