Smotherman Michael, Metzner Walter
Department of Physiological Science, University of California, Los Angeles, California 90095-1606, USA.
J Neurophysiol. 2003 Feb;89(2):814-21. doi: 10.1152/jn.00246.2002.
Echolocating horseshoe bats respond to flight-speed induced shifts in echo frequency by adjusting the frequency of subsequent calls. Under natural conditions, Doppler effects may force the frequency of a returning echo several kilohertz above the original emission frequency. By lowering subsequent call frequencies, the bat can return echo frequencies to within a narrow spectral bandwidth to which its highly specialized auditory system is most sensitive. While Doppler-shift compensation (DSC) behavior specifically refers to frequency compensation, other parameters of the returning echo, such as delay, duration, and interaural time and intensity differences have been shown to influence DSC performance. Understanding the nature of these influences has already led to a better appreciation of the neurophysiology of DSC. Here we provide a quantitative analysis of the effects of a prominent feature of the returning echo, its intensity, on DSC performance in horseshoe bats. Although DSC performance generally tolerates echo attenuation up to approximately 40 dB relative to the outgoing emission intensity, a systematic decline in DSC performance can be observed over this range. Generally, the effects of echo attenuation are characterized by a reduction in 1) the overall amount of compensation relative to the size of the shift in echo frequency and 2) the rate at which the bat responds to perceived echo shifts. These effects appear to be the consequence of a systematic shift in the range of echo frequencies capable of inducing DSC behavior. In particular, the reference frequency (the minimum shift in echo frequency that will elicit DSC behavior) appears to be highly sensitive to echo intensity. Every 10-dB reduction in echo intensity shifts the reference upward nearly 250 Hz. Our results indicate that, even at the highest intensity levels, relatively minor changes in echo intensity critically influence frequency compensation during normal DSC. We conclude with a discussion of how these results might impact echolocation behavior of horseshoe bats under natural and experimental conditions.
使用回声定位的菊头蝠会通过调整后续叫声的频率,来应对飞行速度引起的回声频率变化。在自然条件下,多普勒效应可能会使返回回声的频率比原始发射频率高出几千赫兹。通过降低后续叫声的频率,蝙蝠可以将回声频率恢复到其高度专业化的听觉系统最敏感的狭窄频谱带宽内。虽然多普勒频移补偿(DSC)行为具体指的是频率补偿,但返回回声的其他参数,如延迟、持续时间以及双耳时间和强度差异,已被证明会影响DSC性能。了解这些影响的本质,已经让我们对DSC的神经生理学有了更好的认识。在这里,我们对返回回声的一个突出特征——强度,对菊头蝠DSC性能的影响进行了定量分析。尽管DSC性能通常能够耐受相对于发出的发射强度高达约40分贝的回声衰减,但在这个范围内可以观察到DSC性能的系统性下降。一般来说,回声衰减的影响表现为:1)相对于回声频率变化幅度而言,整体补偿量减少;2)蝙蝠对感知到的回声变化的响应速率降低。这些影响似乎是能够引发DSC行为的回声频率范围发生系统性变化的结果。特别是,参考频率(能够引发DSC行为的回声频率的最小变化)似乎对回声强度高度敏感。回声强度每降低10分贝,参考频率就会向上移动近250赫兹。我们的结果表明,即使在最高强度水平下,回声强度的相对微小变化也会严重影响正常DSC过程中的频率补偿。最后,我们讨论了这些结果可能如何影响菊头蝠在自然和实验条件下的回声定位行为。