critical self-tuning and efferent control of inner ear hair cells
ORAL
Abstract
Hair cells employ active mechanisms to improve their sensitivity to force stimuli. A plethora of measurements indicate that these mechanisms position hair bundles, the mechanosensory organelles of hair cells, near a Hopf bifurcation. The recent disovery that the self-oscillations that embody these mechanisms are suppressed by powerful stimuli corroborates a normal form model for hair bundle dynamics in which a self-tuning process robustly maintains the control parameter in the proximity of the critical point.
Synaptic input to hair cells inhibits self-oscillations but negates the stimulus-induced suppression effect; inspired by the observation of this subtle latter phenomenon, we show that synaptic input can be understood as a distinct process governing the control parameter, and we explore the effects of synaptic input and critical self-tuning on the response of hair bundles to forcing.
Synaptic input to hair cells inhibits self-oscillations but negates the stimulus-induced suppression effect; inspired by the observation of this subtle latter phenomenon, we show that synaptic input can be understood as a distinct process governing the control parameter, and we explore the effects of synaptic input and critical self-tuning on the response of hair bundles to forcing.
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Publication: DOI: 10.1016/j.bpj.2024.09.006
Presenters
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Charles Metzler-Winslow
University of California, Los Angeles
Authors
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Charles Metzler-Winslow
University of California, Los Angeles
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Martín A Toderi
Dep. of Physics and Astronomy - University of California, Los Angeles, University of California, Los Angeles
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Dolores Bozovic
University of California, Los Angeles