Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD 21218, USA
Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD 21218, USA.
J Exp Biol. 2018 Dec 10;221(Pt 24):jeb191155. doi: 10.1242/jeb.191155.
To navigate in the natural environment, animals must adapt their locomotion in response to environmental stimuli. The echolocating bat relies on auditory processing of echo returns to represent its surroundings. Recent studies have shown that echo flow patterns influence bat navigation, but the acoustic basis for flight path selection remains unknown. To investigate this problem, we released bats in a flight corridor with walls constructed of adjacent individual wooden poles, which returned cascades of echoes to the flying bat. We manipulated the spacing and echo strength of the poles comprising each corridor side, and predicted that bats would adapt their flight paths to deviate toward the corridor side returning weaker echo cascades. Our results show that the bat's trajectory through the corridor was not affected by the intensity of echo cascades. Instead, bats deviated toward the corridor wall with more sparsely spaced, highly reflective poles, suggesting that pole spacing, rather than echo intensity, influenced bat flight path selection. This result motivated investigation of the neural processing of echo cascades. We measured local evoked auditory responses in the bat inferior colliculus to echo playback recordings from corridor walls constructed of sparsely and densely spaced poles. We predicted that evoked neural responses would be discretely modulated by temporally distinct echoes recorded from the sparsely spaced pole corridor wall, but not by echoes from the more densely spaced corridor wall. The data confirm this prediction and suggest that the bat's temporal resolution of echo cascades may drive its flight behavior in the corridor.
为了在自然环境中导航,动物必须根据环境刺激来调整它们的运动方式。回声定位蝙蝠依靠对回声的听觉处理来代表其周围环境。最近的研究表明,回声流动模式会影响蝙蝠的导航,但飞行路径选择的声学基础仍然未知。为了解决这个问题,我们在一个由相邻的单个木杆组成的飞行走廊中释放蝙蝠,这些木杆会向飞行中的蝙蝠返回一连串的回声。我们操纵组成每个走廊侧面的木杆的间距和回声强度,并预测蝙蝠会调整它们的飞行路径,偏向返回较弱回声的走廊侧面。我们的结果表明,蝙蝠在走廊中的轨迹不受回声级联强度的影响。相反,蝙蝠偏向于具有更稀疏间隔和更高反射性的杆的走廊壁,这表明杆间距而不是回声强度影响了蝙蝠的飞行路径选择。这一结果促使我们研究回声级联的神经处理。我们测量了蝙蝠下丘脑中对来自具有稀疏和密集间隔杆的走廊墙壁的回声回放记录的局部诱发听觉反应。我们预测,来自稀疏间隔杆走廊墙壁的时间上不同的回声会离散地调制诱发的神经反应,但来自更密集间隔的走廊墙壁的回声不会。数据证实了这一预测,并表明蝙蝠对回声级联的时间分辨率可能会驱动其在走廊中的飞行行为。