O'Neill W E, Suga N
Science. 1979 Jan 5;203(4375):69-73. doi: 10.1126/science.758681.
Echolocating bats determine distance to targets by the time delay between their emitted biosonar pulses and the returning echoes. By varying the delay between synthetic pulses and echoes in stimulus pairs at various repetition rates and durations, neurons have been found in the auditory cortex of the mustache bat (Pteronotus parnellii rubiginosus) which are sensitive to target range during the search, approach, and terminal phases of prey capture or landing. Two classes of range-sensitive neurons were found: (i) tracking neurons, whose best delay for response to an echo following the emitted pulse becomes shorter and narrower as the bat closes in on the target, and (ii) range-tuned neurons, whose best delay is constant, and which respond to the target only when it is within a certain narrow fixed range. Range-tuned neurons are specialized for processing echoes only during a particular period of the search, approach, or terminal phases of echolocation, and they provide support for a theory of ranging in bats that incorporates groups of neurons with a spectrum of preferred echo delays to detect target distance.
使用回声定位的蝙蝠通过其发出的生物声纳脉冲与返回回声之间的时间延迟来确定到目标的距离。通过在各种重复率和持续时间下改变刺激对中合成脉冲与回声之间的延迟,在髭蝠(Pteronotus parnellii rubiginosus)的听觉皮层中发现了对猎物捕获或着陆的搜索、接近和终端阶段的目标范围敏感的神经元。发现了两类对范围敏感的神经元:(i)跟踪神经元,随着蝙蝠靠近目标,其对发出脉冲后回声响应的最佳延迟变得更短且更窄;(ii)范围调谐神经元,其最佳延迟是恒定的,并且仅在目标处于某个狭窄的固定范围内时才对目标做出反应。范围调谐神经元专门用于仅在回声定位的搜索、接近或终端阶段的特定时期处理回声,并且它们为蝙蝠的测距理论提供了支持,该理论纳入了具有一系列优选回声延迟的神经元组以检测目标距离。