Department of Cognitive, Linguistic, and Psychological Sciences, Box 1853, Brown University, Providence, RI 02912, USA.
Science. 2011 Jul 29;333(6042):627-30. doi: 10.1126/science.1202065.
When echolocating big brown bats fly in complex surroundings, echoes arriving from irrelevant objects (clutter) located to the sides of their sonar beam can mask perception of relevant objects located to the front (targets), causing "blind spots." Because the second harmonic is beamed more weakly to the sides than the first harmonic, these clutter echoes have a weaker second harmonic. In psychophysical experiments, we found that electronically misaligning first and second harmonics in echoes (to mimic the misalignment of corresponding neural responses to harmonics in clutter echoes) disrupts the bat's echo-delay perception but also prevents clutter masking. Electronically offsetting harmonics to realign their neural responses restores delay perception but also clutter interference. Thus, bats exploit harmonics to distinguish clutter echoes from target echoes, sacrificing delay acuity to suppress masking.
当回声定位的大褐蝙蝠在复杂的环境中飞行时,来自其声纳波束侧面的不相关物体(杂波)的回声会掩盖对位于前方的相关物体(目标)的感知,从而产生“盲点”。由于第二谐波比第一谐波向侧面发射得更弱,这些杂波回波的第二谐波较弱。在心理物理学实验中,我们发现,在回声中电子地失谐第一和第二谐波(以模拟对杂波回声中谐波的对应神经响应的失谐)会破坏蝙蝠的回声延迟感知,但也会防止杂波掩蔽。电子地偏移谐波以使它们的神经响应重新对齐会恢复延迟感知,但也会干扰杂波。因此,蝙蝠利用谐波来区分杂波回声和目标回声,牺牲延迟敏锐度以抑制掩蔽。