A ratchet mechanism for amplification in low-frequency mammalian hearing
Tobias Reichenbach, A. J. Hudspeth

TL;DR
This paper proposes a ratchet-like mechanism combining hair-bundle motility and electromotility in mammalian cochleas, explaining low-frequency hearing and unifying various experimental observations.
Contribution
It introduces a novel ratchet mechanism that unites two active processes in the cochlea, providing a new model for low-frequency auditory amplification.
Findings
The ratchet mechanism explains low-frequency hearing beyond the cochlear resonance.
It accounts for the shape and phase of apical tuning curves.
It describes how electromotility decouples forces, extending hearing range.
Abstract
The sensitivity and frequency selectivity of hearing result from tuned amplification by an active process in the mechanoreceptive hair cells. In most vertebrates the active process stems from the active motility of hair bundles. The mammalian cochlea exhibits an additional form of mechanical activity termed electromotility: its outer hair cells (OHCs) change length upon electrical stimulation. The relative contributions of these two mechanisms to the active process in the mammalian inner ear is the subject of intense current debate. Here we show that active hair-bundle motility and electromotility can together implement an efficient mechanism for amplification that functions like a ratchet: sound-evoked forces acting on the basilar membrane are transmitted to the hair bundles whereas electromotility decouples active hair-bundle forces from the basilar membrane. This unidirectional…
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