Selective attention in a synchronising bushcricket: physiology, behaviour and ecology


Autoria(s): Nityananda, Vivek; Stradner, Juergen; Balakrishnan, Rohini; Roemer, Heinrich
Data(s)

01/09/2007

Resumo

Synchronising bushcricket males achieve synchrony by delaying their chirps in response to calling neighbours. In multi-male choruses, males that delay chirps in response to all their neighbours would remain silent most of the time and be unable to attract mates. This problem could be overcome if the afferent auditory system exhibited selective attention, and thus a male interacted only with a subset of neighbours. We investigated whether individuals of the bushcricket genus Mecopoda restricted their attention to louder chirps neurophysiologically, behaviourally and through spacing. We found that louder leading chirps were preferentially represented in the omega neuron but the representation of softer following chirps was not completely abolished. Following chirps that were 20 dB louder than leading chirps were better represented than leading chirps. During acoustic interactions, males synchronised with leading chirps even when the following chirps were 20 dB louder. Males did not restrict their attention to louder chirps during interactions but were affected by all chirps above a particular threshold. In the field, we found that males on average had only one or two neighbours whose calls were above this threshold. Selective attention is thus achieved in this bushcricket through spacing rather than neurophysiological filtering of softer signals.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.iisc.ernet.in/26836/1/56.pdf

Nityananda, Vivek and Stradner, Juergen and Balakrishnan, Rohini and Roemer, Heinrich (2007) Selective attention in a synchronising bushcricket: physiology, behaviour and ecology. In: Journal of Comparative Physiology, 193 (9). 983 -991.

Publicador

Springer

Relação

http://www.springerlink.com/content/l82t38211w76n502/

http://eprints.iisc.ernet.in/26836/

Palavras-Chave #Centre for Ecological Sciences
Tipo

Journal Article

PeerReviewed