
- Animals depend heavily on spatial information from the environment to find food, mates, a roost or a nest. Local visual
- CRCNS: Innovative Technologies Inspired by Biosonar Our collaborative research group combines empirical and theoretical work to develop and test models of
- The sonar beam pattern of a flying bat as it tracks tethered insects
- Dynamics of Hippocampal Spatial Representation in Echolocating Bats Nachum Ulanovsky* and Cynthia F. Moss
- Biol. Lett. doi:10.1098/rsbl.2006.0501
- Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience www.frontiersin.org August 2010 | Volume 4 | Article 33 | 1 BEHAVIORAL NEUROSCIENCE
- Transformation of external-ear spectral cues into perceived delays by the big brown bat, Eptesicus fuscus
- Wing Surface Tactile Receptors: Electron Microscopy and Flight Behavior Ben Falk1, John M. Zook2, Susanne Sterbing-D'Angelo1, Cynthia F. Moss1
- MULTIMODAL LOCALIZATION OF A FLYING BAT Kaushik Ghose a
- Flying big brown bats emit a beam with two lobes in the vertical Kaushik Ghose and Cynthia F. Moss
- Behavioral/Systems/Cognitive Vocal Premotor Activity in the Superior Colliculus
- Supplemental color figures for "A Sensorimotor Approach to Sound Local-ization" by Murat Aytekin, Cynthia F. Moss, and Jonathan Z. Simon, Neural
- ARTICLE Communicated by J. Kevin O'Regan A Sensorimotor Approach to Sound Localization
- From spatial orientation to food acquisition in echolocating bats
- INTRODUCTION Insectivorous echolocating bats must contend with a variety of
- Green Bumpy Red Orange Gold Flag AveragePulseInterval(msec)
- ORIGINAL PAPER Adaptive behavior for texture discrimination by the free-flying
- The bat head-related transfer function reveals binaural cues for sound localization in azimuth and elevation
- Spatial perception and adaptive sonar behavior Murat Aytekina)
- Vocal control of acoustic information for sonar discriminations by the echolocating bat, Eptesicus fuscus
- Anim. Behav., 1997, 54, 131141 Ontogeny of vocal signals in the little brown bat, Myotis lucifugus
- 2141 Tydings Hall College Park, Maryland 20742
- INTRODUCTION Individual animals that fly within a group coordinate trajectories
- FLYING FISH GLIDE AS WELL We're all familiar with birds that are as
- ly circulating NNRTI-resistant strains in San Francisco pose a great and immediate threat to
- INTRODUCTION Auditory scene analysis is the process that allows listeners to
- INTRODUCTION Animal sensory systems are continuously bombarded by
- Flying in silence: Echolocating bats cease vocalizing to avoid sonar jamming
- Supporting Information Chiu et al. 10.1073/pnas.0804408105
- What the bat's voice tells the bat's brain Nachum Ulanovsky*
- INTRODUCTION Insects flying at night expose themselves to potential predation by
- The role of the external ear in vertical sound localization in the free flying bat, Eptesicus fuscus
- Hippocampal cellular and network activity in freely moving echolocating bats
- Behavioral/Systems/Cognitive Steering by Hearing: A Bat's Acoustic Gaze Is Linked to Its
- Neurobiology of echolocation in bats Cynthia F Moss
- A computational sensorimotor model of bat echolocation Harry R. Erwina)
- Echolocation behavior of big brown bats, Eptesicus fuscus, in the field and the laboratory
- Target flutter rate discrimination by bats using frequency-modulated sonar sounds: Behavior and signal processing models
- Spatially Selective Auditory Responses in the Superior Colliculus of the Echolocating Bat
- Can bats obtain object related information from sonar Smooth spherical beads were used as S+. Differently
- Performance data were collected for one bat. The performance, measured in the percent of trials the bat hit S+, varied with which S-was presented (Fig. 4).
- #953Object Discrimination in the Flying Bat, Eptesicus fuscus Ben Falk1, Tameeka Williams2, Murat Aytekin1,4, Kaushik Ghose1,4, Cynthia Moss1,3,4
- J Comp Physiol A (2011) 197:8996 DOI 10.1007/s00359-010-0590-9
- Echolocating Bats Use a Nearly Time-Optimal Strategy to Intercept Prey
- Auditory scene analysis by echolocation in bats Cynthia F. Mossa)
- Active Listening for Spatial Orientation in a Complex Auditory Scene
- ORIGINAL PAPER Doreen E. Valentine Shiva R. Sinha Cynthia F. Moss
- Bat wing sensors support flight control Susanne Sterbing-D'Angeloa,1
- Social learning of a novel foraging task by big brown bats, Eptesicus fuscus Genevieve Spanjer Wright a,*, Gerald S. Wilkinson a
- Day 1 Day 5 Adaptive sonar and flight behavior of the echolocating bat, Eptesicus fuscusAdaptive sonar and flight behavior of the echolocating bat, Eptesicus fuscus
- Available online at www.sciencedirect.com Adaptive vocal behavior drives perception by echolocation in bats
- INTRODUCTION Echolocating bats use biological sonar to determine the spatial location of objects in the
- Active Control of Acoustic Field-of-View in a Biosonar Yossi Yovel1