Simmons J A, Dear S P, Ferragamo M J, Haresign T, Fritz J
Department of Neuroscience, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island 02912, USA.
Biol Bull. 1996 Aug;191(1):109-21. doi: 10.2307/1543071.
The echolocating big brown bat, Eptesicus fuscus, broadcasts brief frequency-modulated (FM) ultrasonic sounds and perceives objects from echoes of these sounds returning to its ears. Eptesicus is an insectivorous species that uses sonar to locate and track flying prey. Although the bat normally hunts in open areas, it nevertheless is capable of chasing insects into cluttered environments such as vegetation, where it completes interceptions in much the same manner as in the open except that it has to avoid the obstacles as well as catch the insect. During pursuit, the bat shortens its sonar signals and increases their rate of emission as it closes in to seize the target, and it keeps its head pointed at the insect throughout the maneuver. In the terminal stage of interception, the bat makes rapid adjustments in its flight-path and body posture to capture the insect, and these reactions occur whether the bat is pursuing its prey in the open or close to obstacles such as vegetation. Insects can be distinguished from other objects by the spectrum and phase of their echoes, and Eptesicus is very good at discriminating these acoustic features. To identify the insect in the open, but especially to distinguish which object is the insect in clutter, the bat must have some means for representing these features throughout the interception maneuver. Moreover, continuity for perception of these features is necessary to keep track of the prey in complex surroundings, so the nature of the auditory representations for the spectrum and phase of echoes has to be conserved across the approach, tracking, and terminal stages. The first problem is that representation of changes in the phase of echoes requires neural responses in the bat's auditory system to have temporal precision in the microsecond range, which seems implausible from conventional single-unit studies in the bat's inferior colliculus, where the temporal jitter of responses typically is hundreds of microseconds. Another problem is that echoes do not explicitly evoke neural responses in the inferior colliculus distinct from responses evoked by the broadcast during the terminal stage because the delay of echoes is too short for responsiveness to recover from the emissions. In contrast, each emission and each echo evokes its own responses during the approach and tracking stages of pursuit. How does the bat consistently represent the phase of echoes in spite of these evident limitations in neural responses? Local multiunit responses recorded from the inferior colliculus of Eptesicus reveal a novel format for encoding the phase of echoes at all stages of interception. Changes in echo phase (0 degree or 180 degrees) produce shifts in the latency of responses to the emission by hundreds of microseconds, an unexpected finding that demonstrates the existence of expanded time scales in neural responses representing the target at all stages of pursuit.
具有回声定位能力的大棕蝠(Eptesicus fuscus)发出短暂的调频(FM)超声波,并通过这些声音返回耳朵的回声来感知物体。大棕蝠是一种食虫物种,它利用声纳来定位和追踪飞行中的猎物。尽管蝙蝠通常在开阔区域捕食,但它仍能够追逐昆虫进入如植被等杂乱的环境中,在那里它完成拦截的方式与在开阔区域大致相同,只是它必须既要避开障碍物又要捕获昆虫。在追捕过程中,蝙蝠在靠近目标准备抓捕时会缩短其声纳信号并提高发射频率,并且在整个行动过程中始终将头部对准昆虫。在拦截的最后阶段,蝙蝠会迅速调整其飞行路径和身体姿势以捕获昆虫,无论蝙蝠是在开阔区域追捕猎物还是在靠近如植被等障碍物的地方,这些反应都会发生。昆虫可以通过其回声的频谱和相位与其他物体区分开来,而大棕蝠非常擅长辨别这些声学特征。为了在开阔区域识别昆虫,尤其是在杂乱环境中区分哪个物体是昆虫,蝙蝠在整个拦截行动中必须有某种方式来表征这些特征。此外,在复杂环境中追踪猎物时,对这些特征的感知连续性是必要的,所以在接近、追踪和最后阶段,回声频谱和相位的听觉表征性质必须保持一致。第一个问题是,回声相位变化的表征要求蝙蝠听觉系统中的神经反应在微秒范围内具有时间精度,而从对蝙蝠下丘的传统单单元研究来看这似乎不太可能,在蝙蝠下丘中,反应的时间抖动通常是数百微秒。另一个问题是,在最后阶段,回声不会明确地在下丘中引发与发射引发的反应不同的神经反应,因为回声的延迟太短,无法使反应从发射中恢复过来。相比之下,在追捕的接近和追踪阶段,每次发射和每次回声都会引发其自身的反应。尽管神经反应存在这些明显的局限性,蝙蝠是如何始终如一地表征回声相位的呢?从大棕蝠下丘记录的局部多单元反应揭示了一种在拦截的所有阶段对回声相位进行编码的新形式。回声相位的变化(0度或180度)会使对发射反应的潜伏期发生数百微秒的变化,这一意外发现表明在追捕的所有阶段,代表目标的神经反应中存在扩展的时间尺度。