The ultrasound-induced negative phonotactic response of tethered, flying Australian field crickets habituates to repeated stimuli. Using the magnitude of the metathoracic leg's swing during a series of ultrasonic stimuli as a measure of habituation, we show that: (1) the response declines exponentially; (2) the response recovers spontaneously; (3) repeated trials produce more rapid and stronger habituation; (4) successive stimuli presented more rapidly produce more rapid and stronger habituation; (5) a weaker stimulus intensity produces more rapid and stronger habituation; (6) the habituation shows stimulus generalization (i.e. the response is similar for different ultrasonic frequencies); (7) a novel stimulus produces dishabituation; ...
Crickets are mainly nocturnal species known for the loud, persistent, chirping sounds many of their ...
Animals that communicate acoustically serve as models for investigating how organisms respond to sou...
Phonotaxis in female cricket Acheta domesticus can be selective or unselective in response to model ...
Tethered, flying Australian field crickets (Teleogryllus oceanicus) stimulated with ultrasound respo...
Tethered, flying Australian field crickets (Teleogryllus oceanicus) stimulated with ultrasound respo...
In response to ultrasonic stimuli, tethered flying crickets perform evasive steering movements that ...
Acoustic communication requires filter mechanisms to process and recognize key features of the perce...
Acoustic signals trigger various behaviours in insects such as courtship or escape from predators. H...
An ultrasonic stimulus induced negative phonotactic steering in the yaw axis of tethered, flying Aus...
Behavioural phonotaxis (oriented movement in response to sound) is an effective means to quantify au...
Female Acheta domesticus respond selectively to model calling songs with intensities above 75 dB and...
Animals detect, recognize and localize relevant objects in noisy, multi-source environments. Female ...
Animals need to flexibly respond to stimuli from their environment without compromising behavioural ...
Crickets rely on binaural comparisons of intensity to locate sound. Intensity can be encoded by resp...
Many insects have auditory systems capable of detecting the ultrasonic calls of insectivorous bats a...
Crickets are mainly nocturnal species known for the loud, persistent, chirping sounds many of their ...
Animals that communicate acoustically serve as models for investigating how organisms respond to sou...
Phonotaxis in female cricket Acheta domesticus can be selective or unselective in response to model ...
Tethered, flying Australian field crickets (Teleogryllus oceanicus) stimulated with ultrasound respo...
Tethered, flying Australian field crickets (Teleogryllus oceanicus) stimulated with ultrasound respo...
In response to ultrasonic stimuli, tethered flying crickets perform evasive steering movements that ...
Acoustic communication requires filter mechanisms to process and recognize key features of the perce...
Acoustic signals trigger various behaviours in insects such as courtship or escape from predators. H...
An ultrasonic stimulus induced negative phonotactic steering in the yaw axis of tethered, flying Aus...
Behavioural phonotaxis (oriented movement in response to sound) is an effective means to quantify au...
Female Acheta domesticus respond selectively to model calling songs with intensities above 75 dB and...
Animals detect, recognize and localize relevant objects in noisy, multi-source environments. Female ...
Animals need to flexibly respond to stimuli from their environment without compromising behavioural ...
Crickets rely on binaural comparisons of intensity to locate sound. Intensity can be encoded by resp...
Many insects have auditory systems capable of detecting the ultrasonic calls of insectivorous bats a...
Crickets are mainly nocturnal species known for the loud, persistent, chirping sounds many of their ...
Animals that communicate acoustically serve as models for investigating how organisms respond to sou...
Phonotaxis in female cricket Acheta domesticus can be selective or unselective in response to model ...