The total electrical response and action potentials of separate neurons in the cochlear nuclei in Vespertilionidae and Rhinolophidae were investigated. Maximum sensitivity to ultrasound was recorded in Vespertilionidae in the frequency ranges 10–30 and 70–80 kc/sec, and in Rhinolophidae in the frequency ranges 10–30 and 84–86 kc/sec. Mininum off-response thresholds were observed in Vespertilionidae in the range 50–60 kc/sec, and in Rhinolophidae in the range 78–80 kc/sec. The areas of responses by neurons in the cochlear nuclei in both species of bats were similar in shape to those recorded in the same structure in other animals. An exception was provided by Rhinolophidae, in which three peculiar types of neurons were observed: 1) neurons whose response area lay in the frequency ranges up to 78 kc/sec or from 80 to 90 kc/sec; 2) neurons responding in the range 40–90 kc/sec, but not sensitive to stimuli with a fill frequency of 78–80 kc/sec; and 3) neurons whose response area lay in the range 78–80 kc/sec, but in which the character of the response changed from tonic to phasic when there was a change in the fill frequency of the stimulus. Maximum selectivity with regard to fill frequency of stimulus was observed in the neurons of Rhinolophidae in the frequency range 70–90 kc/sec.