Abstract

Single unit responses in the superior olive of the greater horseshoe bat to ultrasonic stimuli with a filling frequency within the echolocation range were investigated. Some neurons were found to have three completely unconnected response regions with characteristic frequencies of 1/2 and 1/3 of the basic frequency, which was within the 80–86 kHz band. An increase in strength of the stimulus with filling frequency equal to the characteristic frequency of the neuron changed the tonic regime of activity into phasic. Presentation of two stimuli, overlapping in time, replaced the phasic regime by tonic. The frequency of the tonic response corresponded exactly to the beating frequency up to 1200 Hz (synchronization of unit discharges with each beating cycle). The synchronized tonic regime was preserved to definite strengths and filling frequencies of the two stimuli.

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