Marrying critical oscillators with traveling waves shapes nonlinear sound processing in the cochlea
Henri Ver Hulst, Carles Blanch Mercader, Frank J\"ulicher, and Pascal Martin

TL;DR
This paper presents a nonlinear cochlear model combining critical oscillators and traveling waves, explaining how the cochlea maintains consistent tuning and response times across sound levels through collective nonlinear dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces a novel integrated model of distributed critical oscillators with traveling waves, capturing cochlear tuning and response behaviors across sound intensities.
Findings
Model reproduces experimental cochlear tuning curves.
Preserves power-law responsiveness without critical slowing down.
Accounts for nonlinear energy buildup and viscoelastic coupling.
Abstract
The cochlea's capacity to process a broad range of sound intensities has been linked to nonlinear amplification by critical oscillators. However, while the increasing sensitivity of a critical oscillator upon decreasing the stimulus magnitude comes with proportionally sharper frequency tuning and slower responsiveness -- critical slowing down, the observed bandwidth of cochlear frequency tuning and the cochlear response time vary little with sound level. Because the cochlea operates as a distributed system rather than a single critical oscillator, it remains unclear whether criticality can serve as a fundamental principle for cochlear amplification. Here we tackle this challenge by integrating tonopically distributed critical oscillators in a traveling-wave model of the cochlea. Importantly, critical oscillators generically provide spatial buildup of energy gain from energy pumping into…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHearing, Cochlea, Tinnitus, Genetics · Acoustic Wave Phenomena Research · Music Technology and Sound Studies
