Information generated by the moving pinnae of Rhinolophus rouxi: tuning of the morphology at different harmonics.

Bats typically emit multi harmonic calls. Their head morphology shapes the emission and hearing sound fields as a function of frequency. Therefore, the sound fields are markedly different for the various harmonics. As the sound field provides bats with all necessary cues to locate objects in space,...

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Main Authors: Dieter Vanderelst, Jonas Reijniers, Jan Steckel, Herbert Peremans
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2011-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3117793?pdf=render
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author Dieter Vanderelst
Jonas Reijniers
Jan Steckel
Herbert Peremans
author_facet Dieter Vanderelst
Jonas Reijniers
Jan Steckel
Herbert Peremans
author_sort Dieter Vanderelst
collection DOAJ
description Bats typically emit multi harmonic calls. Their head morphology shapes the emission and hearing sound fields as a function of frequency. Therefore, the sound fields are markedly different for the various harmonics. As the sound field provides bats with all necessary cues to locate objects in space, different harmonics might provide them with variable amounts of information about the location of objects. Also, the ability to locate objects in different parts of the frontal hemisphere might vary across harmonics. This paper evaluates this hypothesis in R. rouxi, using an information theoretic framework. We estimate the reflector position information transfer in the echolocation system of R. rouxi as a function of frequency. This analysis shows that localization performance reaches a global minimum and a global maximum at the two most energetic frequency components of R. rouxi call indicating tuning of morphology and harmonic structure. Using the fundamental the bat is able to locate objects in a large portion of the frontal hemisphere. In contrast, using the 1st overtone, it can only locate objects, albeit with a slightly higher accuracy, in a small portion of the frontal hemisphere by reducing sensitivity to echoes from outside this region of interest. Hence, different harmonic components provide the bat either with a wide view or a focused view of its environment. We propose these findings can be interpreted in the context of the foraging behaviour of R. rouxi, i.e., hunting in cluttered environments. Indeed, the focused view provided by the 1st overtone suggests that at this frequency its morphology is tuned for clutter rejection and accurate localization in a small region of interest while the finding that overall localization performance is best at the fundamental indicates that the morphology is simultaneously tuned to optimize overall localization performance at this frequency.
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spelling doaj.art-9a2a8ca75d7d4959881c17bebcd0af942022-12-21T21:46:14ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032011-01-0166e2062710.1371/journal.pone.0020627Information generated by the moving pinnae of Rhinolophus rouxi: tuning of the morphology at different harmonics.Dieter VanderelstJonas ReijniersJan SteckelHerbert PeremansBats typically emit multi harmonic calls. Their head morphology shapes the emission and hearing sound fields as a function of frequency. Therefore, the sound fields are markedly different for the various harmonics. As the sound field provides bats with all necessary cues to locate objects in space, different harmonics might provide them with variable amounts of information about the location of objects. Also, the ability to locate objects in different parts of the frontal hemisphere might vary across harmonics. This paper evaluates this hypothesis in R. rouxi, using an information theoretic framework. We estimate the reflector position information transfer in the echolocation system of R. rouxi as a function of frequency. This analysis shows that localization performance reaches a global minimum and a global maximum at the two most energetic frequency components of R. rouxi call indicating tuning of morphology and harmonic structure. Using the fundamental the bat is able to locate objects in a large portion of the frontal hemisphere. In contrast, using the 1st overtone, it can only locate objects, albeit with a slightly higher accuracy, in a small portion of the frontal hemisphere by reducing sensitivity to echoes from outside this region of interest. Hence, different harmonic components provide the bat either with a wide view or a focused view of its environment. We propose these findings can be interpreted in the context of the foraging behaviour of R. rouxi, i.e., hunting in cluttered environments. Indeed, the focused view provided by the 1st overtone suggests that at this frequency its morphology is tuned for clutter rejection and accurate localization in a small region of interest while the finding that overall localization performance is best at the fundamental indicates that the morphology is simultaneously tuned to optimize overall localization performance at this frequency.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3117793?pdf=render
spellingShingle Dieter Vanderelst
Jonas Reijniers
Jan Steckel
Herbert Peremans
Information generated by the moving pinnae of Rhinolophus rouxi: tuning of the morphology at different harmonics.
PLoS ONE
title Information generated by the moving pinnae of Rhinolophus rouxi: tuning of the morphology at different harmonics.
title_full Information generated by the moving pinnae of Rhinolophus rouxi: tuning of the morphology at different harmonics.
title_fullStr Information generated by the moving pinnae of Rhinolophus rouxi: tuning of the morphology at different harmonics.
title_full_unstemmed Information generated by the moving pinnae of Rhinolophus rouxi: tuning of the morphology at different harmonics.
title_short Information generated by the moving pinnae of Rhinolophus rouxi: tuning of the morphology at different harmonics.
title_sort information generated by the moving pinnae of rhinolophus rouxi tuning of the morphology at different harmonics
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3117793?pdf=render
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