Abstract

Isolated outer hair cells (OHC) of the guinea pig cochlea were exposed to external alternating electric fields parallel to the longitudinal axis of the cells. This resulted in oscillations of the cells' length that were measured photoelectrically using a ratiometric light amplifier. At 5 Hz and elongations up to 300 nm, amplitude of the cell length during oscillation was a linear function of the amplitude of the sinusoidal electric field. When increasing the stimulus frequency up to 32 kHz, OHC length changes followed the stimulus cycle-by-cycle. Oscillations at frequencies above 32 kHz escaped the experimental approach by their small amplitudes and could not be excluded. The frequency dependence of the motile response measured at 5-12,000 Hz had low-pass filter characteristics in cells of the second, third and fourth turns of the cochlea. However, frequency tuning of the motile response was absent in each OHC and systematic differences between different turns were not observed.

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