<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<metadata>
  <identifier>Helen_Wills_2007_10_01_Richard_Lyon</identifier>
  <title>Cochlea Modeling Retrospective</title>
  <creator>UC-Berkeley Ear Club</creator>
  <mediatype>movies</mediatype>
  <collection>opensource_movies</collection>
  <description>Talk given October 1, 2007 for the UC-Berkeley Ear Club.

Richard F. Lyon
Google
Mountain View, CA

"Cochlea Modeling Retrospective"

There is a long history of cochlea modeling that people need to be
aware of, to help design, optimize, and evaluate neuromorphic hearing
systems. In particular, it's important to understand: the notions of
time-frequency and time-scale separation and the classes of filters
that these notions imply; the large-scale AGC and "essential"
nonlinearities that compress the wide dynamic range of sound into a
small representation range; the indirect relationship of transfer
functions to tuning curves; the relative properties of cascade and
parallel filterbanks; the need for higher-order poles to get
realistic transfer functions; why zeros are needed to keep the delay
realistic; and why and how to capture temporal structure for
subsequent processing.  We review these topics and some early
contributions to this field.</description>
  <date>2007</date>
  <year>2007</year>
  <subject>Cochlea Modeling; neuroscience</subject>
  <publicdate>2007-10-06 01:27:14</publicdate>
  <addeddate>2007-10-06 01:26:46</addeddate>
  <uploader>jeff@teeters.us</uploader>
  <sound>sound</sound>
  <color>color</color>
  <updatedate>2007-10-06 01:31:40</updatedate>
  <updater>JeffT</updater>
</metadata>

