Abstract

Frequency analysis in the mammalian cochlea depends on the propagation of frequency information in the form of a travelling wave (TW) across tonotopically arranged auditory sensilla. TWs have been directly observed in the basilar papilla of birds and the ears of bush-crickets (Insecta: Orthoptera) and have also been indirectly inferred in the hearing organs of some reptiles and frogs. Existing experimental approaches to measure TW function in tetrapods and bush-crickets are inherently invasive, compromising the fine-scale mechanics of each system. Located in the forelegs, the bush-cricket ear exhibits outer, middle and inner components; the inner ear containing tonotopically arranged auditory sensilla within a fluid-filled cavity, and externally protected by the leg cuticle. Here, we report bush-crickets with transparent ear cuticles as potential model species for direct, non-invasive measuring of TWs and tonotopy. Using laser Doppler vibrometry and spectroscopy, we show that increased transmittance of light through the ear cuticle allows for effective non-invasive measurements of TWs and frequency mapping. More transparent cuticles allow several properties of TWs to be precisely recovered and measured in vivo from intact specimens. Our approach provides an innovative, non-invasive alternative to measure the natural motion of the sensilla-bearing surface embedded in the intact inner ear fluid.

Highlights

  • Among vertebrates, mammals and birds exhibit an elaborate hearing system, in which auditory perception relies on mechanical and neurophysiological processes occurring in the inner ear [1]

  • Cuticle transparency was quantified by measuring the transmittance of the cuticle covering the hearing organ

  • At the light spectrum wavelength of the laser Doppler vibrometry (LDV) beam (633 nm, Polytec PSV-500; Waldbronn, Germany), the curves can be distinguished into two groups

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Summary

Introduction

Mammals and birds exhibit an elaborate hearing system, in which auditory perception relies on mechanical and neurophysiological processes occurring in the inner ear [1]. Frequency discrimination occurs in the cochlea, a coiled, fluid-filled structure of bone located inside the skull. Sound is decomposed in a spatial frequency map characterized as tonotopy. This is supported by an oscillatory motion travelling.

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