Abstract
Sound energy propagates in the cochlea through a forward-traveling or slow wave supported by the cochlear partition and fluid inertia. Additionally, cochlear models support traveling wave propagation in the reverse direction as the expected mechanism for conveying otoacoustic emissions out of the cochlea. Recently, however, this hypothesis has been questioned, casting doubt on the process by which otoacoustic emissions travel back out through the cochlea. The proposed alternative reverse travel path for emissions is directly through the fluids of the cochlea as a compression pressure in the form of a fast wave. In the present study, a custom-made micro-pressure sensor was used in vivo in the gerbil cochlea to map two-tone-evoked pressure responses at distinct longitudinal and vertical locations in both the scala tympani and scala vestibuli. Analyses of the magnitude and phase of intracochlear pressure responses at the primary tone and distortion product frequencies were used to distinguish between fast and slow waves in both the forward- and reverse-propagation directions. Results demonstrated that distortion products may travel in both forward and reverse directions post-generation and the existence of both traveling and compression waves. The forward-traveling component appeared to duplicate the process of any external tone, tuned to the local characteristic-frequency place, as it increased compressively and nonlinearly with primary-tone levels. A compression wave was evidenced at frequencies above the cutoff of the recording site. In the opposite direction, a reverse-traveling wave played the major role in driving the stapes reversely and contributed to the distortion product otoacoustic emission. The compression wave may also play a role in reverse propagation when distortion products are generated at a region close to the stapes.
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