Coen Philip, Xie Marjorie, Clemens Jan, Murthy Mala
Princeton Neuroscience Institute, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544, USA.
Princeton Neuroscience Institute, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544, USA; Department of Molecular Biology, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544, USA.
Neuron. 2016 Feb 3;89(3):629-44. doi: 10.1016/j.neuron.2015.12.035.
Diverse animal species, from insects to humans, utilize acoustic signals for communication. Studies of the neural basis for song or speech production have focused almost exclusively on the generation of spectral and temporal patterns, but animals can also adjust acoustic signal intensity when communicating. For example, humans naturally regulate the loudness of speech in accord with a visual estimate of receiver distance. The underlying mechanisms for this ability remain uncharacterized in any system. Here, we show that Drosophila males modulate courtship song amplitude with female distance, and we investigate each stage of the sensorimotor transformation underlying this behavior, from the detection of particular visual stimulus features and the timescales of sensory processing to the modulation of neural and muscle activity that generates song. Our results demonstrate an unanticipated level of control in insect acoustic communication and uncover novel computations and mechanisms underlying the regulation of acoustic signal intensity.
从昆虫到人类,多种动物物种利用声学信号进行交流。对歌声或言语产生的神经基础的研究几乎完全集中在频谱和时间模式的生成上,但动物在交流时也能调整声学信号的强度。例如,人类会根据对接收者距离的视觉估计自然地调节言语的响度。在任何系统中,这种能力的潜在机制仍未得到表征。在这里,我们表明果蝇雄性会根据与雌性的距离调节求偶歌声的幅度,并且我们研究了这种行为背后感觉运动转换的每个阶段,从特定视觉刺激特征的检测、感觉处理的时间尺度到产生歌声的神经和肌肉活动的调节。我们的结果证明了昆虫声学交流中意想不到的控制水平,并揭示了调节声学信号强度背后的新计算和机制。