2 research outputs found
Treatise on Hearing: The Temporal Auditory Imaging Theory Inspired by Optics and Communication
A new theory of mammalian hearing is presented, which accounts for the
auditory image in the midbrain (inferior colliculus) of objects in the
acoustical environment of the listener. It is shown that the ear is a temporal
imaging system that comprises three transformations of the envelope functions:
cochlear group-delay dispersion, cochlear time lensing, and neural group-delay
dispersion. These elements are analogous to the optical transformations in
vision of diffraction between the object and the eye, spatial lensing by the
lens, and second diffraction between the lens and the retina. Unlike the eye,
it is established that the human auditory system is naturally defocused, so
that coherent stimuli do not react to the defocus, whereas completely
incoherent stimuli are impacted by it and may be blurred by design. It is
argued that the auditory system can use this differential focusing to enhance
or degrade the images of real-world acoustical objects that are partially
coherent. The theory is founded on coherence and temporal imaging theories that
were adopted from optics. In addition to the imaging transformations, the
corresponding inverse-domain modulation transfer functions are derived and
interpreted with consideration to the nonuniform neural sampling operation of
the auditory nerve. These ideas are used to rigorously initiate the concepts of
sharpness and blur in auditory imaging, auditory aberrations, and auditory
depth of field. In parallel, ideas from communication theory are used to show
that the organ of Corti functions as a multichannel phase-locked loop (PLL)
that constitutes the point of entry for auditory phase locking and hence
conserves the signal coherence. It provides an anchor for a dual coherent and
noncoherent auditory detection in the auditory brain that culminates in
auditory accommodation. Implications on hearing impairments are discussed as
well.Comment: 603 pages, 131 figures, 13 tables, 1570 reference
Dynamical Systems
Complex systems are pervasive in many areas of science integrated in our daily lives. Examples include financial markets, highway transportation networks, telecommunication networks, world and country economies, social networks, immunological systems, living organisms, computational systems and electrical and mechanical structures. Complex systems are often composed of a large number of interconnected and interacting entities, exhibiting much richer global scale dynamics than the properties and behavior of individual entities. Complex systems are studied in many areas of natural sciences, social sciences, engineering and mathematical sciences. This special issue therefore intends to contribute towards the dissemination of the multifaceted concepts in accepted use by the scientific community. We hope readers enjoy this pertinent selection of papers which represents relevant examples of the state of the art in present day research. [...