Female field crickets use phonotaxis to locate males by their calling song. Male song production and female behavioural sensitivity form a pair of matched frequency filters, which in Gryllus bimaculatus are tuned to a frequency of about 4.7 kHz. Directional sensitivity is supported by an elaborate system of acoustic tracheae, which make the ears function as pressure difference receivers. As a result, phase differences between left and right sound inputs are transformed into vibration amplitude differences. Here we critically tested the hypothesis that acoustic properties of internal transmissions play a major role in tuning directional sensitivity to the calling song frequency, by measuring tympanal vibrations as a function of sound directi...
The recognition and localization of sound signals is fundamental to acoustic communication. Complex ...
Phonotactic steering behaviour of the cricket G. bimaculatus was analysed with a new highly sensitiv...
Animals need to flexibly respond to stimuli from their environment without compromising behavioural ...
Female field crickets use phonotaxis to locate males by their calling song. Male song production and...
Female field crickets use phonotaxis to locate males by their calling song. Male song production and...
Animals detect, recognize and localize relevant objects in noisy, multi-source environments. Female ...
<p>Male field crickets generate calls to attract distant females through tegminal stridulation: the ...
Male field crickets generate calls to attract distant females through tegminal stridulation: the rub...
Tree cricket males produce tonal songs, used for mate attraction and male–male interactions. Active ...
Fundamental for understanding the evolution of communication systems is both the variation in a sign...
SummaryA dominant theme of acoustic communication is the partitioning of acoustic space into exclusi...
Male field crickets emit pure-tone mating calls by rubbing their wings together. Acoustic radiation ...
Male crickets and their close relatives bush-crickets (Gryllidae and Tettigoniidae, respectively; Or...
Phonotaxis is the ability to orient towards or away from sound sources. Crickets can locate conspeci...
Acoustic communication signals, both their production and reception, are intertwined with all aspect...
The recognition and localization of sound signals is fundamental to acoustic communication. Complex ...
Phonotactic steering behaviour of the cricket G. bimaculatus was analysed with a new highly sensitiv...
Animals need to flexibly respond to stimuli from their environment without compromising behavioural ...
Female field crickets use phonotaxis to locate males by their calling song. Male song production and...
Female field crickets use phonotaxis to locate males by their calling song. Male song production and...
Animals detect, recognize and localize relevant objects in noisy, multi-source environments. Female ...
<p>Male field crickets generate calls to attract distant females through tegminal stridulation: the ...
Male field crickets generate calls to attract distant females through tegminal stridulation: the rub...
Tree cricket males produce tonal songs, used for mate attraction and male–male interactions. Active ...
Fundamental for understanding the evolution of communication systems is both the variation in a sign...
SummaryA dominant theme of acoustic communication is the partitioning of acoustic space into exclusi...
Male field crickets emit pure-tone mating calls by rubbing their wings together. Acoustic radiation ...
Male crickets and their close relatives bush-crickets (Gryllidae and Tettigoniidae, respectively; Or...
Phonotaxis is the ability to orient towards or away from sound sources. Crickets can locate conspeci...
Acoustic communication signals, both their production and reception, are intertwined with all aspect...
The recognition and localization of sound signals is fundamental to acoustic communication. Complex ...
Phonotactic steering behaviour of the cricket G. bimaculatus was analysed with a new highly sensitiv...
Animals need to flexibly respond to stimuli from their environment without compromising behavioural ...