The physics of hearing: fluid mechanics and the active process of the inner ear
T. Reichenbach, A. J. Hudspeth

TL;DR
This paper explores the fluid mechanics and active processes within the inner ear, detailing how the cochlea's structure and mechanics enable frequency-specific sound detection and amplification.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the physical and biological mechanisms underlying cochlear function, emphasizing the role of fluid dynamics and active processes in hearing.
Findings
The basilar membrane responds with frequency-specific traveling waves.
Hair cells amplify mechanical signals through active processes.
The cochlea's graded structure determines frequency mapping.
Abstract
Most sounds of interest consist of complex, time-dependent admixtures of tones of diverse frequencies and variable amplitudes. To detect and process these signals, the ear employs a highly nonlinear, adaptive, real-time spectral analyzer: the cochlea. Sound excites vibration of the eardrum and the three miniscule bones of the middle ear, the last of which acts as a piston to initiate oscillatory pressure changes within the liquid-filled chambers of the cochlea. The basilar membrane, an elastic band spiraling along the cochlea between two of these chambers, responds to these pressures by conducting a largely independent traveling wave for each frequency component of the input. Because the basilar membrane is graded in mass and stiffness along its length, however, each traveling wave grows in magnitude and decreases in wavelength until it peaks at a specific, frequency-dependent position:…
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