蝙蝠耳蜗回声定位的机械适应性。

E Foeller, M Kössl
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引用次数: 15

摘要

蝙蝠在其回声定位呼叫中具有长恒频成分的耳蜗力学被尖锐地调谐到占主导地位的二次谐波恒频。海马体蝙蝠使用较短的恒频呼叫成分,其频率不如长恒频蝙蝠稳定。为了研究海马体蝙蝠的耳蜗力学在多大程度上已经专门用于处理恒定频率,我们记录了海马体蝙蝠的畸变产物耳声发射。2f1-f2失真积耳声发射的等失真阈值曲线显示,阈值最大值在65.0 ~ 70.0 kHz附近,接近第二谐波常数频率,第二不敏感接近第一谐波常数频率。在两个频率范围内,2f1-f2失真的群延迟都延长了,这表明一种特殊的耳蜗共振可能起到吸收恒频呼叫分量的作用。与长恒频蝙蝠相比,二次谐波恒频处的阈值最大值不明显,最佳耳蜗频率分离更大。从耳蜗核神经元记录的畸变积耳声发射抑制调谐曲线和神经元调谐曲线显示,在二次谐波恒频范围附近的调谐锐度增加,比长恒频蝙蝠的调谐锐度小。我们的数据表明,海马体蝙蝠的耳蜗代表了一种介于非特化蝙蝠和长恒频蝙蝠之间的中间状态。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Mechanical adaptations for echolocation in the cochlea of the bat Hipposideros lankadiva.

The cochlear mechanics of bats with long constant-frequency components in their echolocation calls are sharply tuned to the dominant second harmonic constant frequency. Hipposiderid bats employ a shorter constant-frequency call component whose frequency is less stable than in long-constant-frequency bats. To investigate to what degree cochlear mechanics in hipposiderid bats are already specialized for the processing of constant frequencies, we recorded distortion-product otoacoustic emissions in Hipposideros lankadiva. Iso-distortion threshold curves for the 2f1-f2 distortion-product otoacoustic emission reveal a threshold maximum close to the second harmonic constant frequency, between 65.0 and 70.0 kHz, and a second insensitivity close to the first harmonic constant frequency. The group delay of the 2f1-f2 distortion is prolonged for both frequency ranges, indicating that a specialized cochlear resonance may act to absorb the constant-frequency call components. Compared to long-constant-frequency bats, the threshold maximum at the second harmonic constant frequency is less pronounced and the optimum cochlear frequency separation is larger. Distortion-product otoacoustic emission suppression tuning curves and neuronal tuning curves recorded from neurons in the cochlear nucleus display an increase of tuning sharpness close to the second harmonic constant-frequency range which is smaller than that reported for long-constant-frequency bats. Our data suggest that the cochlea of hipposiderid bats represents an intermediate state between that of non-specialized bats and long-constant-frequency bats.

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