Summary
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1.
The mechanical time resolution is estimated in the ears of noctuid moths (Noctuidae) and locusts (Acrididae). The vibration velocity of small areas on the tympanal membrane is measured by means of laser vibrometry. The impulse response (Figs. 2B and 5 A) and the transfer function (Fig. 3) are obtained directly by stimulation with very short impulse sounds and pure tones, respectively. The transfer function is also calculated from the experimentally determined impulse response, and vice versa. Finally, the impulse response is obtained by calculation from the measured vibrations caused by noise. The directly determined and the calculated transfer functions are rather similar (Fig. 3A-B).
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2.
The impulse response of the attachment area of the receptor cells in thenoctuid ear is a short, damped vibration with a ‘time constant’ of about 60 μs (Table 1). The attachment area of the receptor cells can thus separate impulses arriving with time intervals larger than 150–200 μs (Fig. 4).
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3.
The ‘time constant’ of the attachment area of the d-cells in thelocust tympanum is about 90 μs (Table 1). The ‘time constant’ for other parts of the locust tympanum varies between 50 μs and 200 μs (Fig. 6).
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We are most grateful to Professor D. Varjú, Dr. S. Boel Pedersen, and Dr. Lee Miller, who critically read earlier versions of the manuscript and offered helpful suggestions, and to the Danish Plant Pathology Institute for supplying the moths. This work was generously supported by the Danish Natural Science Research Council and NATO.
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Schiolten, P., Larsen, O.N. & Michelsen, A. Mechanical time resolution in some insect ears. J. Comp. Physiol. 143, 289–295 (1981). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00611164
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00611164