The romantic notion of crickets singing on a warm summer's evening is quickly dispelled when one comes ear to ear with a stridulating male. Remarkably, stridulating male crickets are able to hear sounds from the environment despite generating a 100 db song (Heiligenberg 1969; Jones and Dambach 1973). This review summarises recent work examining how they achieve this feat of sensory processing. While the responsiveness of the crickets' peripheral auditory system (tympanic membrane, tympanic nerve, state of the acoustic spiracle) is maintained during sound production, central auditory neurons are inhibited by a feedforward corollary discharge signal precisely timed to coincide with the auditory neurons' maximum response to self-generated soun...
Intraspecific acoustic communication requires filtering processes and feature detectors in the audit...
The basic auditory physiology of crickets, and particularly of Teleogryllus commodus (Walker) is exa...
L3, an auditory interneuron in the prothoracic ganglion of female crickets (Acheta domesticus) exhib...
Crickets communicate using loud (100 dB SPL) sound signals that could adversely affect their own aud...
Speaking and singing present the auditory system of the caller with two fundamental problems: discri...
Crickets carry wind-sensitive mechanoreceptors on their cerci, which, in response to the airflow pro...
The ears of stridulating crickets are exposed to loud self-generated sounds that might desensitise t...
How do animals discriminate self-generated from external stimuli during behavior and prevent desensi...
Crickets are mainly nocturnal species known for the loud, persistent, chirping sounds many of their ...
Decoding the neural basis of behaviour requires analysing how the nervous system is organised and ho...
<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...
The cercal system of crickets detects low-frequency air currents produced by approaching predators a...
Male crickets and their close relatives bush-crickets (Gryllidae and Tettigoniidae, respectively; Or...
In crickets, auditory and vibratory communication is important in reproductive behavior, agonistic i...
Intraspecific acoustic communication requires filtering processes and feature detectors in the audit...
The basic auditory physiology of crickets, and particularly of Teleogryllus commodus (Walker) is exa...
L3, an auditory interneuron in the prothoracic ganglion of female crickets (Acheta domesticus) exhib...
Crickets communicate using loud (100 dB SPL) sound signals that could adversely affect their own aud...
Speaking and singing present the auditory system of the caller with two fundamental problems: discri...
Crickets carry wind-sensitive mechanoreceptors on their cerci, which, in response to the airflow pro...
The ears of stridulating crickets are exposed to loud self-generated sounds that might desensitise t...
How do animals discriminate self-generated from external stimuli during behavior and prevent desensi...
Crickets are mainly nocturnal species known for the loud, persistent, chirping sounds many of their ...
Decoding the neural basis of behaviour requires analysing how the nervous system is organised and ho...
<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...
The cercal system of crickets detects low-frequency air currents produced by approaching predators a...
Male crickets and their close relatives bush-crickets (Gryllidae and Tettigoniidae, respectively; Or...
In crickets, auditory and vibratory communication is important in reproductive behavior, agonistic i...
Intraspecific acoustic communication requires filtering processes and feature detectors in the audit...
The basic auditory physiology of crickets, and particularly of Teleogryllus commodus (Walker) is exa...
L3, an auditory interneuron in the prothoracic ganglion of female crickets (Acheta domesticus) exhib...