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Audition 1: Sound and the Ear

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Title: Audition 1: Sound and the Ear


1
Audition 1 Sound and the Ear
  • 1st Year PPP/EP Neurophysiology Prelim
  • Dr. Jennifer Bizley
  • Jennifer.bizley_at_dpag.ox.ac.uk

2
On the Menu for this Lecture
  • Physical properties of sound (frequency,
    amplitude, bandwidth) and their psychophysical
    correlates.
  • Transmission of sound through outer and middle
    ear
  • Filtering of sound by the outer ear,
  • Impedance matching in the middle ear.
  • Structure and function of the inner ear
  • Cochlear mechanics, travelling wave
  • Transduction by hair cell receptors
  • Active mechanisms, role of outer hair cells

3
Sound As a Pressure Wave
  • Vibrations of objects set up pressure waves in
    the surrounding air.
  • The elastic property of air allows these
    pressure waves to propagate (spread).

4
Pure Tones (Sine Waves)
  • For pure tones, the tone frequency is directly
    related to the pitch of the sound, and the
    amplitude is related to perceived loudness.
  • These relationships are logarithmic. Hence octave
    and decibel scales every doubling of frequency
    increases pitch by one octave, every doubling of
    amplitude increases the loudness by 6 dB.

5
Harmonic Complexes (Complex Tones)
  • Most natural oscillators do not just emit simple
    tones of a single frequency. For example, an
    ideal string in a string instrument would
    maintain the triangular shape set up when the
    string is plucked throughout the oscillation.
  • Fourier analysis makes it possible to approximate
    the these vibrations as a sum (series) of sine
    wave vibrations. For large numbers of sine waves
    (Fourier components) the approximation becomes
    very good, for an infinite number of components
    it is exact.
  • Here, as is often the case for natural sounds,
    all sine components are harmonically related i.e.
    their frequencies are all integer multiples of a
    fundamental frequency.

6
Fourier Spectra
  • Because every sound can be decomposed into sine
    (or equivalently, cosine) components, each sound
    has a frequency domain description, which,
    instead of describing the waveform as a function
    of time, states the amplitudes (and phases) of
    the cosine components of the sound. This
    frequency domain description is known as the
    (Fourier) spectrum.
  • sequence
  • 500 Hz

7
Broad Band and Narrow Band Sounds
  • Sounds in which a relatively small number of
    components contain most of the energy are called
    narrow band. The pure tone is an extreme
    example. Narrow band sounds are more or less
    periodic and may evoke an identifiable pitch.
  • Broad band sounds contain very many components of
    similar amplitude and often do not evoke a strong
    pitch (although there are exceptions). Noises and
    clicks are typical examples of natural broadband
    sounds.

8
The Spectrogram
  • The spectrum is a complete description of a sound
    only if the frequency composition of the sound is
    constant over time. However, natural sounds
    usually do vary with time. To deal with this,
    sounds can be divided into short time segments,
    and spectra calculated for each time segment in
    turn. The result of this analysis is called a
    spectrogram.

9
The Neurogram
  • As a crude approximation, one might say that it
    is the job of the ear to produce a spectrogram of
    the incoming sounds, and that the brain
    interprets the spectrogram to identify sounds.
  • This figure shows histograms of auditory nerve
    fibre discharges in response to a speech
    stimulus. Discharge rates depend on the amount of
    sound energy near the neurons characteristic
    frequency.

10
The Long Road from Spectrogram to Auditory Scene
Analysis
  • The Neurogram idea is deceptively simple, and
    does not capture some of the fine scale temporal
    encoding the auditory system is capable of.
  • It is nevertheless clear that the job of the
    auditory system is to perform some sort of
    spectro-temporal analysis to identify and
    localise auditory objects.
  • The auditory system is astonishingly good at this
    job. To appreciate how hard this is, try to guess
    what this sound to the left represents.

11
The Human Ear
12
What Does the External Ear Do?
13
Spectral Cues For Sound Location
14
The Middle Ear Is an Air-filled Cavity
Nasopharynx
15
Impedance Matching by the Middle Ear Difference
in Membrane Area
Middle ear mechanics
AIR
FLUID
16
Middle Ear Ossicles and Muscles
  • Malleus
  • Malleus ligament
  • Incus
  • Incus ligament
  • Stapes muscle (stapedius)
  • Stapes footplate
  • Eardrum
  • Eustachian tube
  • Malleus muscle (tensor tympani)
  • Nerve (chorda tympani) sectioned.

17
Middle Ear (Stapedius) Reflex
Activated by intense sounds
INACTIVE STAPEDIUS
ACTIVE STAPEDIUS
18
The Inner Ear ComprisesFluid-filled Chambers
19
Cross Section of Cochlea
20
Cross Section of Cochlea
PERILYMPH
ENDOLYMPH
PERILYMPH
21
Cross Section of Cochlea
PERILYMPH
ENDOLYMPH
PERILYMPH
22
Propagation of Mechanical Energy in the Cochlea
23
Travelling Wave Along the Basilar Membrane
Von Békésy
24
Travelling Wave Peaks at Different Locations As
the Frequency Changes
Base
Apex
25
Frequency Tuning Along the Basilar Membrane
Base
Apex
Base
Apex
26
Frequency Tuning Along the Basilar Membrane
LOW FREQUENCY
Stiffness decreases from base to apex
HIGH FREQUENCY
27
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28
Movement of theOrgan of Corti
  • Up-down movement of the basilar membrane causes
    the tectorial membrane to slide sideways over the
    membrane, causing a sideways displacement of the
    hair cell bundles in the cochlear hair cells.

29
Hair bundle movements
  • Tip-link between
  • adjacent stereocilia
  • BASILAR
  • MEMBRANE
  • MOVES DOWN
  • BASILAR
  • MEMBRANE
  • MOVES UP

30
Transduction by Hair Cells
  • The stereocilia of the hair cell bundle are
    connected by tip links.
  • Movement of the bundle is thought to change the
    tension on the tip links, thereby opening or
    closing stretch sensitive K channels.
  • K channel opening causes an influx of K from
    the endolymph, depolarisation of the hair cell
    membrane, opening of V-gated Ca channels and an
    increased probablility of transmitter release.

K
Endolymph
K
80 mV
Reticular lamina
Voltage-gated Calcium channel
-50 mV
Hair cell
Ca
Perilymph
Auditory Nerve fibre
31
Stretch receptors associated with the tip links
  • Source Ashmore (2004) Nature 432, 685 - 686

32
Receptor Potentials
  • At low frequencies the membrane potential of the
    hair cell follows every cycle of the stimulus (AC
    response, top).
  • At high frequencies the membrane potential is
    unable to follow individual cycles, but instead
    remains depolarised throughout the duration of
    the stimulus (DC response, bottom).
  • At intermediate frequencies the membrane
    potential exhibits a mixed AC DC response.

33
Inner and Outer Hair Cells
34
Organ of Corti after antibiotics
  • NORMAL
  • KANAMYCIN

35
Active Mechanisms Contributing to Cochlear
Mechanics
  • OHC change length when stimulated.
  • Movement of the cilia causes depolarisation, as
    in IHCs.
  • Depolarisation triggers a rapid change in length.

36
The outer hair cells special trick
37
Active Mechanisms Contributing to Cochlear
Mechanics
  • The length change is mediated by an unusual motor
    protein (probably Prestin) in the OHC membrane.
  • OHC motility produces a localised amplification
    of the basilar membrane motion, leading to higher
    sensitivity and sharper frequency tuning.
  • It is also a source of non-linearity weak
    stimuli are amplified more effectively than
    strong ones.

38
Summary 1
  • Sound is a pressure wave set up by oscillations
    of a physical object.
  • Every sound can be thought of as a sum of sine
    waves. The frequency composition of the sound
    (spectrum) can be highly informative about the
    sound source.
  • The outer ear funnels sound to the ear drum and
    filters broad band sounds to generate spectral
    cues to sound location.
  • The middle ear provides impedance matching,
    using piston and lever actions to facilitate the
    passage of the sound wave from air to fluid
    (endolymph) in the inner ear.

39
Summary 2
  • Oscillations of the oval window of the cochlea
    set up travelling waves in the basilar
    membrane.
  • The position of the peak of the travelling wave
    depends on the sound frequency (the lower the
    sound, the closer the peak moves to the apex).
    The basilar membrane therefore acts as a
    mechanical frequency analyser.
  • Basilar membrane motion causes displacement of
    hair cell bundles on sensory receptors cells in
    the organ of Corti. Stretch receptors on or near
    the hair cell bundles then translate the
    mechanical acoustic signal into an electrical
    signal. This electrical signal controls the
    probability of transmitter release onto auditory
    nerve fibre afferents.

40
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41
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42
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43
Transduction by hair cells
  • Tectorial
  • membrane
  • Basilar membrane
  • Depolarization
  • Hyperpolarization

44
Travelling waves peaks at different locations as
the frequency changes
45
Frequency tuning along the basilar membrane
  • LOW
  • FREQUENCY
  • Stiffness decreases from base to apex
  • HIGH
  • FREQUENCY

46
Frequency tuning of basilar membrane is
physiologically vulnerable
47
Frequency tuning of basilar membrane is
physiologically vulnerable
  • KANAMYCIN
  • Threshold (dB)
  • NORMAL
  • Frequency (kHz)

48
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49
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50
Frequency selectivity
  • Stiffness
  • Active amplification

51
Afferent innervation of the hair cells
52
Listening to auditory nerve fibres
53
Response of an auditory nerve fibre
54
Firing rate increases with sound intensity
55
Tonotopicity in the auditory nerve
56
Frequency tuning at high sound levels
  • Characteristic frequency

57
Phase locking
  • Period of cycle
  • Time
  • Pressure
  • Hair cell
  • response
  • Auditory
  • nerve

58
Middle Ear Cavity
59
Sine Waves and Linear Systems
  • Many natural oscillators are linear systems
    because the physical laws governing them are
    linear Newtons 2nd law F m a Hookes
    law F k x
  • Linear systems obey the superposition
    principle, i.e. the response to the sum of two
    inputs is the sum of the responses to each
    individual input g(a)x g(b)y ?
    g(ab)xy.
  • Since Fouriers theorem states that any sound is
    the sum of sine waves. It is therefore possible
    to characterise linear systems one sine wave at
    a time to arrive at a complete description of
    the systems behaviour.
  • This insight motivated the choice of sine wave
    stimuli in auditory research. Unfortunately, many
    aspects of the auditory system, including basilar
    membrane motion are fairly non-linear.
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