New findings contradict a prevailing belief about the
inner ear
Editor: Scientists continue to make new discoveries about the ear and
how we hear on a regular basis, and the constant hope is that these new
discoveries will lead to new treatment for hearing loss. This press
release from the University of Michigan discusses a new finding about
otoacoustic emissions.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
A healthy ear emits soft sounds in response to the sounds that travel
in. Detectable with sensitive microphones, these otoacoustic emissions
help doctors test newborns' hearing. A deaf ear doesn't produce these
echoes.
New research involving the University of Michigan and Oregon Health and
Science University shows that, contrary to the current scientific thought,
the emissions don't leave the ear the same way they entered. The findings
give new insight into a phenomenon that researchers study to better
understand hearing loss, and they reinforce a previous controversial study
that came to a similar conclusion.
A paper on the research is published in the current issue of
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
"The former wisdom on how otoacoustic emissions left the ear was that
there was a backward-traveling wave going along the structure of the
cochlea in the same way as the forward-traveling sound wave," said Karl
Grosh, a professor in the U-M departments of Mechanical Engineering and
Biomedical Engineering and an author of the paper. "These measurements
show that is not the case."
Grosh said the next step is to develop tools to find out where hearing
damage is occurring. "If we want to try to infer from the emission what's
wrong with the ear, we have to understand how the emission is produced,"
Grosh said.
The experiment, performed at the Oregon Health and Science University
in associate professor Tianying Ren's lab, showed that the sound waves
coming out travel through the fluid of the inner ear, rather than rippling
along the basilar membrane of the cochlea.
The cochlea, located deep in the ear, is shaped like a snail. The
basilar membrane essentially cuts the inner channel of the cochlea
diametrically in half into two chambers. Both chambers are filled with
liquid.
Sound waves going into the ear undulate along the basilar membrane
through the cochlea and eventually excite the organ of Corti, which senses
and sends the sound signals to the brain through the auditory nerve.
Sounds coming out of the ear, according to results from this
experiment, likely travel through the fluid on either side of the basilar
membrane.
For this experiment, the researchers used laser interferometers, which
detect waves, to measure vibrations of the basilar membrane in response to
sound at two locations in the cochlea of gerbils. They detected evidence
of sound waves traveling forward on the membrane, but they found no
evidence of backward-traveling waves.
"Our new method can detect vibrations of less than a picometer, 1,000
times smaller than the diameter of an atom. The new data demonstrate that
there is no detectable backward-traveling wave at physiological sound
levels across a wide frequency range," said Ren, principal investigator of
this project. "This knowledge will change scientists' fundamental thinking
on how waves propagate inside the cochlea, or how the cochlea processes
sounds."
The paper is called "Reverse wave propagation in the cochlea."
Michigan Engineering
The University of Michigan College of Engineering is ranked among the
top engineering schools in the country. Michigan Engineering boasts one of
the largest engineering research budgets of any public university, at more
than $130 million annually. Michigan Engineering is home to 11 academic
departments and a National Science Foundation Engineering Research Center.
The College plays a leading role in the Michigan Memorial Phoenix Energy
Institute and the Graham Environmental Sustainability Institute. Within
the College, there is a special emphasis on research in three emerging
areas: nanotechnology and integrated microsystems; cellular and molecular
biotechnology; and information technology. Michigan Engineering is raising
$300 million for capital projects and program support in these and other
areas to continue fostering breakthrough scholarly advances, an
unparalleled scope of student opportunities and contributions that improve
the quality of life on an international scale.