
pmid: 25775538
pmc: PMC4386384
Significance Echolocating bats and toothed whales emit a terminal buzz right before capture. The high call rate (≥180 Hz) and short duration should preclude informed reactions, leaving the ubiquitous buzz an enigma. By removing prey from bats right before capture, we showed that the buzz is not inflexible but adaptable and that bats react on a very fast time scale to sudden changes in perceptual feedback. Acoustic and behavioral reactions differed, indicating separate central control of echolocation and capture movements, as well as importance of somatosensory feedback. These results in a naturally behaving animal relying on multimodal integration of actively controlled senses are significant for a central problem in neurobiology: fast decision making.
Physiological, Decision, Decision Making, Video Recording, bats, bat, Buzz, Feedback, Predatory Behavior/physiology, Vocalization, Chiroptera, Animals, Animalia, Chordata, Feedback, Physiological, Animal, Bat, Acoustics, Biodiversity, Sensory motor, Animal Communication, Chiroptera/physiology, Flight, Echolocation, Flight, Animal, Predatory Behavior, Mammalia, Vocalization, Animal
Physiological, Decision, Decision Making, Video Recording, bats, bat, Buzz, Feedback, Predatory Behavior/physiology, Vocalization, Chiroptera, Animals, Animalia, Chordata, Feedback, Physiological, Animal, Bat, Acoustics, Biodiversity, Sensory motor, Animal Communication, Chiroptera/physiology, Flight, Echolocation, Flight, Animal, Predatory Behavior, Mammalia, Vocalization, Animal
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