An immersed boundary model of the cochlea with parametric forcing
William Ko, John M. Stockie

TL;DR
This paper presents a fluid-mechanical model of the cochlea using the immersed boundary method, showing that parametric resonance driven by outer hair cell activity can amplify vibrations, providing insights into cochlear amplification mechanisms.
Contribution
It introduces a novel immersed boundary model incorporating parametric forcing to explain cochlear amplification through hydrodynamic resonance.
Findings
Existence of resonant solutions within human auditory parameters.
Numerical simulations confirm the analytical Floquet stability analysis.
Parametric resonance influences wave propagation along the basilar membrane.
Abstract
The cochlea or inner ear has a remarkable ability to amplify sound signals. This is understood to derive at least in part from some active process that magnifies vibrations of the basilar membrane (BM) and the cochlear partition in which it is embedded, to the extent that it overcomes the effect of viscous damping from the surrounding cochlear fluid. Many authors have associated this amplification ability to some type of mechanical resonance within the cochlea, however there is still no consensus regarding the precise cause of amplification. Our work is inspired by experiments showing that the outer hair cells within the cochlear partition change their lengths when stimulated, which can in turn cause periodic distortions of the BM and other structures in the cochlea. This paper investigates a novel fluid-mechanical resonance mechanism that derives from hydrodynamic interactions between…
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