Yoshida Soshi, Hase Kazuma, Heim Olga, Kobayasi Kohta I, Hiryu Shizuko
Faculty of Life and Medical Sciences, Doshisha University, Kyotanabe 610-0394, Japan.
Graduate School of Environmental Studies, Nagoya University, Nagoya 464-8601, Japan.
iScience. 2024 Feb 28;27(3):109222. doi: 10.1016/j.isci.2024.109222. eCollection 2024 Mar 15.
Animals must instantaneously escape from predators for survival, which requires quick detection of approaching threats. Although the neural mechanisms underlying the perception of looming objects have been extensively studied in the visual system, little is known about their auditory counterparts. Echolocating bats use their auditory senses to perceive not only the soundscape, but also the physical environment through active sensing. Although object movement induces both echo delay changes and Doppler shifts, the actual information required to perceive movement has been unclear. Herein, we addressed this question by playing back phantom echoes mimicking an approaching target to horseshoe bats and found that they relied only on Doppler shifts. This suggests that the bats do not perceive object motion in the spatiotemporal dimension (i.e., positional variation), as in vision, but rather take advantage of acoustic sensing by directly detecting velocity, thereby enabling them to respond instantaneously to approaching threats.
动物必须为了生存瞬间逃离捕食者,这需要快速检测到逼近的威胁。尽管在视觉系统中对逼近物体感知的神经机制已进行了广泛研究,但对其听觉对应机制却知之甚少。回声定位蝙蝠不仅利用听觉感知声景,还通过主动感知来了解物理环境。虽然物体运动既会引起回声延迟变化,也会产生多普勒频移,但感知运动所需的实际信息尚不清楚。在此,我们通过向马蹄蝠回放模拟逼近目标的虚拟回声来解决这个问题,发现它们仅依赖多普勒频移。这表明蝙蝠不像在视觉中那样在时空维度(即位置变化)上感知物体运动,而是通过直接检测速度来利用声学感知,从而使它们能够对逼近的威胁立即做出反应。