Yeah, but not only the frequency is important - the wave-form is very relevant. For example if your wave-form is a triangle, listerners will tell you that it is very noisy compared to a simple sinus. If you use sinus as a base of your vector space triangles really look like a noisy mix. My question is, if the basic elements are really sinus, or if the basic Eigen-Waves of the cochlea are other Wave-Forms (e.g. slightly wider or narrower than sinus, ...). If physics in the ear isn't linear, maybe sinus isn't the purest wave-form for a listener.

Most people in Physics only know sinus and maybe sometimes rectangles as a base for transformations, but mathematically you could use a lot of other things - maybe very similar to sinus, but different.

But if you apply a frequency-dependent phase shift to the triangle wave, nobody will be able to tell the difference unless the frequency is very low.