Abstract

In a hazardous environment, it is fundamentally important to successfully evaluate the motion of sounds. Previous studies demonstrated “auditory looming bias” in both macaques and humans, as looming sounds that increased in intensity were processed preferentially by the brain. In this study on rats, we used a prepulse inhibition (PPI) of the acoustic startle response paradigm to investigate whether auditory looming sound with intrinsic warning value could draw attention of the animals and dampen the startle reflex caused by the startling noise. We showed looming sound with a duration of 120 ms enhanced PPI compared with receding sound with the same duration; however, when both sound types were at shorter duration/higher change rate (i.e., 30 ms) or longer duration/lower rate (i.e., more than 160 ms), there was no PPI difference. This indicates that looming sound–induced PPI enhancement was duration dependent. We further showed that isolation rearing impaired the abilities of animals to differentiate looming and receding prepulse stimuli, although it did not abolish their discrimination between looming and stationary prepulse stimuli. This suggests that isolation rearing compromised their assessment of potential threats from approaching objects and receding objects.

Highlights

  • The detection of an approaching object is fundamentally important to the survival of an organism

  • The results of our study demonstrated that the looming sounds with an adequate duration (i.e., 120 ms) induced prepulse inhibition (PPI) enhancement compared with receding sounds with the same duration, suggesting that approaching sounds serve an intrinsic warning cue for individuals to dampen the startle response elicited by a sudden and interfering stimuli

  • We further showed that this looming effect–induced PPI enhancement was time or rate dependent

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Summary

Introduction

The detection of an approaching object is fundamentally important to the survival of an organism. In auditory field, looming sounds with rising intensity and receding sounds with falling intensity are primary cues to aid in judging the motion of objects (Seifritz et al, 2002; Hall and Moore, 2003; Baumgartner et al, 2017). The phenomenon of looming sounds containing an intrinsic and unconditioned warning value being more salient than receding sounds, is termed as “auditory looming bias” (Seifritz et al, 2002; Hall and Moore, 2003; Maier et al, 2004; Baumgartner et al, 2017; Glatz and Chuang, 2019; Bidelman and Myers, 2020). Looming Biases in Rats macaques were more attracted to the approaching harmonic tones by orienting them to longer time than receding tones (Ghazanfar et al, 2002)

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