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Cochlear Mechanics [electronic resource] : Introduction to a Time Domain Analysis of the Nonlinear Cochlea / by Hendrikus Duifhuis.

By: Duifhuis, Hendrikus [author.].
Contributor(s): SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: Boston, MA : Springer US, 2012Description: XIV, 261p. 66 illus. online resource.Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9781441961174.Subject(s): Medicine | Neurosciences | Otorhinolaryngology | Biomedical engineering | Biomedicine | Neurosciences | Otorhinolaryngology | Biophysics and Biological Physics | Biomedical EngineeringDDC classification: 612.8 Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Part I Anatomy and Function of the Linear Cochlea -- 1 Historical Introduction -- 2 Developments from 1950 to 1980 -- 3 Emerging Cochlear Mechanics -- Part II Anatomy and Function of the Nonlinear Cochlea -- 4 Nonlinear Auditory Phenomena (I) knowledge around 1980 -- 5 Modeling the Nonlinear Cochlea -- Part III Results and Open Issues -- 6 Results -- 7 Applications and perspective -- Part IV Appendices -- Index.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: The field of cochlear mechanics has received increasing interest over the last few decades. In the majority of these studies, researchers use linear systems analysis or linear approximations of the nonlinear (NL) systems. Even though it has been clear that the intact cochlea operates nonlinearly, lack of tools for proper nonlinear analysis, and widely available tools for linear analysis still lead to inefficient and possibly incorrect interpretation of the biophysics of the cochlea. An example is the presumption that a change in cochlear stiffness at hair cell level must account for the observed change in tuning (or frequency mapping) due to prestin application. Hypotheses like this need to be addressed in a tutorial that is lucid enough to analyze and explain basic differences. Cochlear Mechanics presents a useful and mathematically justified/justifiable approach in the main part of the text, an approach that will be elucidated with clear examples. The book will be useful to scientists in auditory neuroscience, as well as graduate students in biophysics/biomedical engineering.
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Part I Anatomy and Function of the Linear Cochlea -- 1 Historical Introduction -- 2 Developments from 1950 to 1980 -- 3 Emerging Cochlear Mechanics -- Part II Anatomy and Function of the Nonlinear Cochlea -- 4 Nonlinear Auditory Phenomena (I) knowledge around 1980 -- 5 Modeling the Nonlinear Cochlea -- Part III Results and Open Issues -- 6 Results -- 7 Applications and perspective -- Part IV Appendices -- Index.

The field of cochlear mechanics has received increasing interest over the last few decades. In the majority of these studies, researchers use linear systems analysis or linear approximations of the nonlinear (NL) systems. Even though it has been clear that the intact cochlea operates nonlinearly, lack of tools for proper nonlinear analysis, and widely available tools for linear analysis still lead to inefficient and possibly incorrect interpretation of the biophysics of the cochlea. An example is the presumption that a change in cochlear stiffness at hair cell level must account for the observed change in tuning (or frequency mapping) due to prestin application. Hypotheses like this need to be addressed in a tutorial that is lucid enough to analyze and explain basic differences. Cochlear Mechanics presents a useful and mathematically justified/justifiable approach in the main part of the text, an approach that will be elucidated with clear examples. The book will be useful to scientists in auditory neuroscience, as well as graduate students in biophysics/biomedical engineering.

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