“…The existence of this rotational axis was confirmed in multiple measurements of middle ear vibration in humans, cats, gerbils, and chinchilla at stimulation frequencies at the lower end of the hearing range ( Helmholtz, 1868 ; Dahmann, 1929 ; Von Békesy, 1941 ; Von Békésy, 1960 ; Guinan and Peake, 1967 ; Hüttenbrink, 1992 ; Rosowski et al, 1999 ; Decraemer and Khanna, 2004 ; Decraemer et al, 2014 ; Rosowski et al, 2020 ). As shown in Figures 8A,B , in chinchilla, the middle ear ossicles move in phase on one side of the rotation axis for stimulus frequencies below 2 kHz, and the displacement of the ossicles increases with the distance from the rotational axis ( Rosowski et al, 2020 ). The movement patterns are complex for higher frequencies, with an additional axis of vibration emerging ( Figures 8E,F ).…”