Abstract
Dolphin strategies for detecting objects and changes in objects were investigated by having three trained bottlenose dolphins perform long-range echolocation tasks. The tasks featured the use of "phantom" echoes produced by capturing the dolphin's outgoing echolocation clicks, convolving the clicks with the impulse response of a physical target to create an echo waveform, then broadcasting the delayed, scaled echo waveform back to the dolphin. Dolphins were trained to report the presence of phantom echoes or a change in phantom echoes. Target simulated ranges varied from 25 to 800 m. At ranges below 75 m, all dolphins followed a single click-echo paradigm, where inter-click intervals exceeded the two-transit time (i.e., the dolphins waited to receive the echo from a click before emitting the next click). As the range increased beyond 75 m, two of the three dolphins increasingly produced bursts, or "packets," of several clicks, then waited for the packet of echoes to return before emitting another packet of clicks. The third dolphin instead utilized very high click repetition rates. The use of click packets may be a response to a limitation in the dolphin's ability to employ multi-echo processing with large inter-echo delays.
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