Vanderelst Dieter, Peremans Herbert
Department of Biological Sciences, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio, United States of America.
Department of Engineering Management, University of Antwerp, Antwerp, Belgium.
PLoS Comput Biol. 2025 May 15;21(5):e1013013. doi: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1013013. eCollection 2025 May.
Some echolocating bats, such as Tadarida brasiliensis, fly in groups when emerging from or entering caves. In large, dense swarms, distinguishing self-generated echoes from the multitude of calls and echoes produced by others presents a significant challenge - akin to a cocktail party nightmare. While spectral jamming responses have been proposed as a solution, this mechanism is unlikely to be effective in such conditions. Here, we propose an alternative hypothesis: rather than isolating their own echoes, bats might navigate by relying on the local amplitude gradient of the collective soundscape. To test this, we developed an agent-based simulation of bats flying through corridors, demonstrating that they can avoid obstacles, including other bats and corridor walls, without distinguishing individual echoes. Our findings suggest that in dense swarms, bats can exploit the emergent acoustic environment to maintain safe distances. The current paper also suggests shifting the perspective on jamming itself. Rather than framing overlapping signals solely as a source of interference, our findings highlight that these signals can also carry useful information, reframing the problem from conflict to cooperative signal processing.
一些具有回声定位能力的蝙蝠,比如巴西无尾蝠,在进出洞穴时会成群飞行。在大型密集的群体中,从众多其他蝙蝠发出的叫声和回声中区分出自己发出的回声是一项重大挑战——类似于鸡尾酒会中的噩梦。虽然有人提出频谱干扰反应作为一种解决方案,但这种机制在这种情况下不太可能有效。在这里,我们提出另一种假设:蝙蝠可能不是通过分离自己的回声来导航,而是依靠集体声景的局部振幅梯度来导航。为了验证这一点,我们开发了一个基于智能体的模拟程序,模拟蝙蝠在走廊中飞行,结果表明它们可以避开障碍物,包括其他蝙蝠和走廊墙壁,而无需区分个体回声。我们的研究结果表明,在密集的群体中,蝙蝠可以利用出现的声学环境来保持安全距离。本文还建议改变对干扰本身的看法。我们的研究结果强调,与其将重叠信号仅仅视为干扰源,这些信号也可以携带有用信息,从而将问题从冲突重新定义为合作信号处理。