Abstract
Measurement of the thresholds of single unit responses in the cochlear nuclei of Vespertilionidae and Rhinolophidae to ultrasonic stimuli of different frequencies showed that some neurons in animals of both families have 2 or 3 characteristic frequencies. If the maximal of them is taken as the basic frequency, the other two characteristic frequencies are in the ratio of 1:2 and 1:3 to it. Corresponding to these characteristic frequencies, basic and complementary response regions were recorded. InMyotis oxygnathus (Vespertilionidae), using frequency-modulated echolocation signals, some neurons in the complementary response regions respond only to stimuli of average strength, i.e., the complementary response regions are "closed." The latent periods of the single unit responses are independent of stimulus frequency. Consequently, correlative reception of echolocation signals is absent at the level of the auditory system in bats.
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