active process and Mechanoelectrical Stimulation
AC is a ______ current
transduction
the 2 potentials i nthe absence ofstimulus
(resting potential) Extracellular potential (endocochlear potential) surrounding the stereo cilia Intracellular potential in the OHC / IHC
1 spike represents
1 spike represents = 1 electrical impulse in response to adequate nt release at synaptic cleft
The combination of the intracellular potential and the endocochlear potential results in a ________ according to what theory?
125-160mV cochlear potential, according to the davis battery theory
TEOAE were discovered in
1978 transient evoked called transient bc clicks are quick
explain how the polarity changes from 300 Hz to 5000 Hz
300 = very clear polarity change, time lock or phase locking is clear 5000 = not as clear bc amplitude of A.C. potential decreases as stimulus frequency increases
in AC, phase locking remains its fidelity up to
3000 Hz this means that AC cannot follow the rhythm over 3000 Hz
Consequences of reduced cochlear potential due to diseases reduced the pos potential from 80+ to
40+ mV,
latency of TEOAEs
5-15ms
2 types of gross evoked potentials
AC = cochlear microphonic - 2 polarities DC = summating potential - 1 polarity
whole nerve action potential is made up of
AC and DC
2 types of intracellular measurments
AC= when the current occurs w both pos and neg polarities = alternating current DC = when the pot drives to only one director = direct current
Features of cochlear active process:
Amplification Sharpened frequency selectivity Nonlinear compression OAES
Stimulus-evoked potential (DC) is the
Asymmetry of receptor potential (Intracellular potential)
the IHC deflect away from the mod when the BM...
BM moves towards reticular lamina
steps of IHC depo step 3
Cell partially depolarized (intracellular positively charged) aka the IHC get less neg - this creates a transmembrane current, and this is a receptor responses, not a neural response
stim evoked potentials
Cochlear Microphonic potential (related to extracellular potential) Summating Potential (related to extracellular potential) (Compound) Action potential [(synchronized) activity of auditory nerve fiber(s)]
in DPOAEs how are f1 and f2 related
F2 is higher freq than F1
steps of IHC depo step 2
Force-gated ion channels (tip links) open (K+/Ca++)
what is adaptation
Hair cells responses (transmembrane current) decline over time with a sustained deflection of the stereocilia.
steps of IHC depo, step 5
Influx of Ca++ in IHCs --> fusion of synaptic vesicles /presynaptic membrane--> release of NT (glutamate) to the synaptic cleft --> activation of glutamate receptors (postsynaptic membrane).
stimulus evoked potentials can be
Intracellular potential - (needles into the cell - intracellular) Gross evoked potential - measuring on the surface on the body - we are mirroring the pot of a group of cells (GROSS) not just one
resting endocochlear potential is carried out by which ion
K+ is the main ion carrying out the function High concentration of K+ developed earlier than the positive endocochlear potential
what happens to the magnitude in a dc pot
Magnitude of the receptor potential saturates at a slower rate for the depolarization than for hyperpolarization, pulling the midline towards the depolarization direction
steps of IHC depo step 1
Mechanical deflections of stereocilia (away from the modiolus)
what does negative stiffness generate
OAES
the spectrum of TEOAS
Spectrum narrower than that of the stimulus - Strong in the range of 1-4 kHz, bc of the filter of the middle ear
resting endocochlear potential is maintianed by the
Stria Vasculuris is the source generates and maintains this potential
The travelling wave travels most rapidly over the basal part of the cochlea, and more and more slowly thereafter, therefore
Substantial neural synchrony is needed
who reaserched CM in 1930
The cochlear microphonic (CM): Wever and Bray (1930) placed an electrode on the auditory nerve, connected it to an amplifier in a room 16 meters away and from there to a loudspeaker.
fast adaptation is
Time constant of 0.16- 4 ms after onset of stim(faster as CF increases)
slow adaptation
Time constant of ~20 ms from the base of the OHC efferent system
steps of IHC depo step 4
Voltage-gated Ca++ channels open, further depolarization more pos charged ions are getting into HC, depo = results in more Calcium to get in
what do these lines represent
diffferent lines represent different potential mV to stim tones
as hair bundles move farther away from resting position, it behaves like ______________, but when it's displaced very close to the resting position the hair bundles themselves___________( not how a normal stiffness would behave, this is the neg stiffness)
a regular spring facilities deflection themselves
displacement if BM results in
a relative movement of the tectorial membrane and BM , bc they are hinged separately
stim ekovked OAEs are a result of the
active process
an AC current can be cancelled by
adding response potential invoked by stimulus starting with the opposite phase (polarity)
OAEs are
are sounds generated in the cochlea and recorded in the external ear canal. Source is the active process of cochlea
how is dc a graded pot
as you increase (woo) the stimulus, you will see larger dc potential (larger baseline shift) magnitude of dc potential is reflected as a baseline shift
as the stim level increases, gross action potentials increase bc
at the group level, the action potentials increase = more nerve fibers to respond, which is why we can measure group action potentials however, action potential at the individual cell level isn't graded, its all or none
what is the dc baseline shift
baseline shift is the shift of the midpoint of the pos and neg polarities ac and dc go up together, but the midpoint shift is the dc component DC is distracted from within AC
if glutamate is high enough, that neurofibers will
be activated and generate a pulse -the pulses are the electrical signal made and passed up to the auditory nerve to the cochlear nucleus
the IHC deflect towards the mod when the BM...
bm moves way from tectorial lamina
IHC at rest, step3
cell hyperpolarized (more neg intracellular) no Ca++ gets in, so nothing happens
Pure tone pair evoked (Distortion product—DPOAEs) are used more in
clinic to produce you send int 2 sounds, one high one low, they are related in some wasy F2 is higher than F1 freq relationshio makes these 2 waves overlap
davis battery theory
concept that there are 2 batteries (1 outside and 1 inside the HC) connecting in a serial arrangement and creating a electrical flow (of K+) across OC
Motility of the cell body: Depolarization/hyperpolarization of OHCs triggers
contraction/expansion of the cell body (by up to 4%)— due to the function of prestin (motor protein)
the fluid movement that IHC's are deflected by is created by
created by the deflection of OHC stereocilia.
in DPOAEs, at a freq called the __________, lots of freq are generated, the loudest one comes out as the distortion product of the OAES
cubic freq
how is dc nonlinear
dc potential does not increases as much at higher stim levels as it does as lower stim levels in Fig B as we increase the stim and get larger AC pot, we get more positive ac pot than neg pot w/ 50 nm displacement pos = 4mV, neg = -.6
since phase locking remains until 3000, this means that the amplitude of the AC pot _________ as stim frequency increases
decreases
motility depoalrization
depo = results in contraction, not NT release - drags BM up since it is attached
resting endocochlear potential is inside or outside
extracellular (outside) +80 mV
reduced cochlear potential measn that with a smaller gradnient across the membrane...
fewer ions into the cell body —> NT wouldnt be released
IHC at rest step 2
force gated channels are closed more, less K, less positive charge
when it acts like a normal spring, how are force and distance related
force goes against the direction, and the distance and force grow together
what kind of pot is dc
graded
AC is a ______ potential
graded, its mag changes as the stim level is rasied / lowered - louder = larger AC pot in magnitude
for a non linear system, single tones produe
harmonics
For linear system, its output waveform will contain only
he same frequency components as the input.
the very small passagethat the fluid has to go through is made by the
hensen's stripe proximit to the longest IHC stereo
With a low-frequency stimulus of high intensity that activates fibers of a wide range of characteristic frequencies, it is only the fibers from the___________ that will be activated in synchrony.
high-frequency (basal region)
motility hyperpolarization
hyper = expand - pushes down the BM - made possible by prestin
how do we couunteract reduced pot due to diseases
increase the stim level to defelct more stereocilia bc: you want to open more channels so there are more ions into the cell body the result is an increased threshold
resting intracellular potential
inside IHC -40 / -45 OHC -60 / -70 occurs by extruding positively charged ions (mainly K+, or/and Ca++)
???Single Frequency evoked (SFOAEs) by product of the
instability of the stereo cilia
wha tis happeneing in the DC chart ?
intracellular voltage changes in in IHC for different freq of stim shpw that the relative size of the AC component declines at higher stim freq
OHC motility is a result of
is a result of Mechanical deflections of stereocilia - Force-gated K+ channels (tip links) open/close - Cell partially depolarized / hyperpolarized
the disportion product does wuttt
it travels along the bm to the apical end until it gets to it's characteristic freq site aka the freq of the distortion product is not the same freq of the F1 and F2 interaction, instead it is 2f1-f2, it is closer to the f2 site
nonlinearity was discovered from experiments on
live squirrel monkeys
comprehensive nonlinearity is an explantion for
loudness recruitment - to stop bm from vibrating so loud sounds can be tolerated - they might be more sensitive to loud sounds
AC compressive non-linearity
mag of ac increases as tim increases, but at higher levels, the mag increases isn't as much as the stim level
the action potential is mearsured at the
measured at the cellular level, but the neuron, not hair cell
in an IHC at rest, step 1
mechanical deflections of stereocilia
why is broad tuning bad
more talkers voices get in, more susceptible to noise
when the hair bundles are within a small amount of deflection there is neg/pos force and neg/pos stifness
neg neg
if you increase the stim level ,can you increase the voltage?
no, they all have the same amount voltage therefore, at the cell level the action pot is not a graded pot
how do we find the baseline
pos = 4, neg = -.6, the midpoint is 4 + (-.6) = 3.4 / 2 = 1.7
deflections of stereocilia are proportional to....
proportional to the displacement of BM - the stereo cilia has to move or it will crack bc it gets closer to tectorial membrane, so it bends away from the mod
IHC deflections are proportional to
proportional to the velocity of BM vibration.
in DPOAEs, the traveling waves of 2______ interect on the bm
pure tones
ac Gross potential
record at a distance from the generator cells. = cochlear microphonic bc the result looks just like the stimulus, - the OHCs in basal turn are the main contributors
summating pot
related to extracellualr pit
coch mic
related to extracellualr pot
movement of the BM results in the shearing of the
reticular lamina against the gelatinous tectorial membrane. - this relative movement brings the hair cells closer / farther from the tectorial membrane
a loss in electrical potentials is the loss in
sharp tuning = harder time separating talker from noise and OAEs
dc is the recordings from a
single OHC
AC source
stereocilia
the polarity of an AC currents follows the
stimulus
what is the summating potential
summating is a response from a group of hair cells = a dc potential, so it only goes to one direction - a far field measurement
compound action potential
synchronized activity of audtory nerve fibers
what are TEOAEs used for
teoaes are used for screening, present in Present if 95-99% of individuals w 20 HL hearing or better, only tell us he OHC
what about the channels makes the baseline shift during depo
the channels are already mostly closed at the resting rate, so during hyper, they don't get much more negative bc the channels are closed. Therefore, there is more room for depo and you can get a higher pos
how does this graph show comprehensive nonlinearity
the characteristic freq will have the most flat response -levels lower than the characterstic level will give the same amount of potential than activity as higher levels = 17
however in negative stiffness, the red dashed line, the hair bundle does what
the hair bundle, in the resting position it applies force going to the same direction the displacement goes
freq of distortion product is
the lower freq minus the freq of higher (2xF1 - F2)
is dc compressively non linear
yes
C. what generates froce in this system
the system itself, this is positive feedback
mechanoelectrical Stimulation of Inner Hair cells happens when
they are deflected by a force due to viscous drag from the relative fluid movement in the subtectorial space (turbulance from fluid will deflect stereo cilia)
IHC at rest, step 4
transmembrane current occurs which are receptor responsnes, no release of NT
reading a TEOAEs chart, the bottom tell us what?
wf from teoaes bottom tells us the snr, amp of oae vs background level we are looking at how tall the blue bars are, they are the snr
how does gates opening effect other gates opening
when one gate opens --> each left over channels bears more force and deflects more from its resting position and becomes more likely to open - causes a sequential response
BM response (displacement) is compressively non-linear for tone levels of
~20 to 80 dB SPL)--response grew 0.2 dB per 1 dB increase of tone level