Angular oscillation of solid scatterers in response to progressive planar acoustic waves: do fish otoliths rock?

Fish can sense a wide variety of sounds by means of the otolith organs of the inner ear. Among the incompletely understood components of this process are the patterns of movement of the otoliths vis-à-vis fish head or whole-body movement. How complex are the motions? How does the otolith organ respo...

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Main Authors: Petr Krysl, Anthony D Hawkins, Carl Schilt, Ted W Cranford
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3415422?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-71c988c751d5461aab6db57d5c70c3732020-11-24T22:25:46ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-0178e4259110.1371/journal.pone.0042591Angular oscillation of solid scatterers in response to progressive planar acoustic waves: do fish otoliths rock?Petr KryslAnthony D HawkinsCarl SchiltTed W CranfordFish can sense a wide variety of sounds by means of the otolith organs of the inner ear. Among the incompletely understood components of this process are the patterns of movement of the otoliths vis-à-vis fish head or whole-body movement. How complex are the motions? How does the otolith organ respond to sounds from different directions and frequencies? In the present work we examine the responses of a dense rigid scatterer (representing the otolith) suspended in an acoustic fluid to low-frequency planar progressive acoustic waves. A simple mechanical model, which predicts both translational and angular oscillation, is formulated. The responses of simple shapes (sphere and hemisphere) are analyzed with an acoustic finite element model. The hemispherical scatterer is found to oscillate both in the direction of the propagation of the progressive waves and also in the plane of the wavefront as a result of angular motion. The models predict that this characteristic will be shared by other irregularly-shaped scatterers, including fish otoliths, which could provide the fish hearing mechanisms with an additional component of oscillation and therefore one more source of acoustical cues.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3415422?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Petr Krysl
Anthony D Hawkins
Carl Schilt
Ted W Cranford
spellingShingle Petr Krysl
Anthony D Hawkins
Carl Schilt
Ted W Cranford
Angular oscillation of solid scatterers in response to progressive planar acoustic waves: do fish otoliths rock?
PLoS ONE
author_facet Petr Krysl
Anthony D Hawkins
Carl Schilt
Ted W Cranford
author_sort Petr Krysl
title Angular oscillation of solid scatterers in response to progressive planar acoustic waves: do fish otoliths rock?
title_short Angular oscillation of solid scatterers in response to progressive planar acoustic waves: do fish otoliths rock?
title_full Angular oscillation of solid scatterers in response to progressive planar acoustic waves: do fish otoliths rock?
title_fullStr Angular oscillation of solid scatterers in response to progressive planar acoustic waves: do fish otoliths rock?
title_full_unstemmed Angular oscillation of solid scatterers in response to progressive planar acoustic waves: do fish otoliths rock?
title_sort angular oscillation of solid scatterers in response to progressive planar acoustic waves: do fish otoliths rock?
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2012-01-01
description Fish can sense a wide variety of sounds by means of the otolith organs of the inner ear. Among the incompletely understood components of this process are the patterns of movement of the otoliths vis-à-vis fish head or whole-body movement. How complex are the motions? How does the otolith organ respond to sounds from different directions and frequencies? In the present work we examine the responses of a dense rigid scatterer (representing the otolith) suspended in an acoustic fluid to low-frequency planar progressive acoustic waves. A simple mechanical model, which predicts both translational and angular oscillation, is formulated. The responses of simple shapes (sphere and hemisphere) are analyzed with an acoustic finite element model. The hemispherical scatterer is found to oscillate both in the direction of the propagation of the progressive waves and also in the plane of the wavefront as a result of angular motion. The models predict that this characteristic will be shared by other irregularly-shaped scatterers, including fish otoliths, which could provide the fish hearing mechanisms with an additional component of oscillation and therefore one more source of acoustical cues.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3415422?pdf=render
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AT carlschilt angularoscillationofsolidscatterersinresponsetoprogressiveplanaracousticwavesdofishotolithsrock
AT tedwcranford angularoscillationofsolidscatterersinresponsetoprogressiveplanaracousticwavesdofishotolithsrock
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