SummaryIn the inner ear, sensory hair cells not only detect but also amplify the softest sounds, allowing us to hear over an extraordinarily wide intensity range. This amplification is frequency specific, giving rise to exquisite frequency discrimination. Hair cells detect sounds with their mechanotransduction apparatus, which is only now being dissected molecularly. Signal detection is not the only role of this molecular network; amplification of low-amplitude signals by hair bundles seems to be universal in hair cells. “Fast adaptation,” the rapid closure of transduction channels following a mechanical stimulus, appears to be intimately involved in bundle-based amplification
As sensory cells, hair cells within the mammalian inner ear convert sounds into receptor potentials ...
AbstractThe sensory epithelium of the mammalian inner ear contains two types of mechanosensory cells...
AbstractAuditory sensory cells (hair cells) are responsible for sound transduction in the cochlea of...
SummaryIn the inner ear, sensory hair cells not only detect but also amplify the softest sounds, all...
Mechanotransduction, the transformation of mechanical force into an electrical signal, allows living...
Mechanotransduction, the transformation of mechanical force into an electrical signal, allows living...
Hair cells in the inner ear provide the basis for the exquisite hearing capabilities of mammals. The...
International audienceTo enhance their mechanical sensitivity and frequency selectivity, hair cells ...
International audienceTo enhance their mechanical sensitivity and frequency selectivity, hair cells ...
Mechanosensation is a primitive and somewhat ubiquitous sense. At the inner ear, sensory hair cells ...
Article in open access on the publisher's website.International audienceHearing relies on the conver...
International audienceAs in other excitable cells, the ion channels of sensory receptors produce ele...
International audienceAs in other excitable cells, the ion channels of sensory receptors produce ele...
During the last year, further evidence has appeared concerning the basis of frequency selectivity in...
sc human voices of nearly identical timbre.We additionally perceive cantly altering the passive mech...
As sensory cells, hair cells within the mammalian inner ear convert sounds into receptor potentials ...
AbstractThe sensory epithelium of the mammalian inner ear contains two types of mechanosensory cells...
AbstractAuditory sensory cells (hair cells) are responsible for sound transduction in the cochlea of...
SummaryIn the inner ear, sensory hair cells not only detect but also amplify the softest sounds, all...
Mechanotransduction, the transformation of mechanical force into an electrical signal, allows living...
Mechanotransduction, the transformation of mechanical force into an electrical signal, allows living...
Hair cells in the inner ear provide the basis for the exquisite hearing capabilities of mammals. The...
International audienceTo enhance their mechanical sensitivity and frequency selectivity, hair cells ...
International audienceTo enhance their mechanical sensitivity and frequency selectivity, hair cells ...
Mechanosensation is a primitive and somewhat ubiquitous sense. At the inner ear, sensory hair cells ...
Article in open access on the publisher's website.International audienceHearing relies on the conver...
International audienceAs in other excitable cells, the ion channels of sensory receptors produce ele...
International audienceAs in other excitable cells, the ion channels of sensory receptors produce ele...
During the last year, further evidence has appeared concerning the basis of frequency selectivity in...
sc human voices of nearly identical timbre.We additionally perceive cantly altering the passive mech...
As sensory cells, hair cells within the mammalian inner ear convert sounds into receptor potentials ...
AbstractThe sensory epithelium of the mammalian inner ear contains two types of mechanosensory cells...
AbstractAuditory sensory cells (hair cells) are responsible for sound transduction in the cochlea of...