Detection of scattered ambient noise by fish

It has been hypothesized that one role of the fish’s auditory system may be to detect and localize nearby fish by ‘‘imaging’’ ambient noise scattered by their swimbladders. This is analogous to the role of the visual system of most animals, where the relevant signal is ambient light scattered by obj...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 1992-04, Vol.91 (4_Supplement), p.2435-2435
Hauptverfasser: Lewis, Thomas N., Rogers, Peter H.
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Rogers, Peter H.
description It has been hypothesized that one role of the fish’s auditory system may be to detect and localize nearby fish by ‘‘imaging’’ ambient noise scattered by their swimbladders. This is analogous to the role of the visual system of most animals, where the relevant signal is ambient light scattered by objects rather than light emitted by luminous objects. A classical conditioning experiment has been performed which indicates that the fish auditory system is capable of functioning in this manner. The ambient noise was provided by a J-9 transducer driven by Gaussian noise. Scattering of ambient noise by the resonant swimbladder was simulated by applying a filtered version of the same Gaussian noise to a small spherical projector. The target strength and bandwidth of the scattered noise were controlled by the attenuation and passband of the filter. The fish was conditioned to respond to the presence of the signal from the spherical projector. Thresholds of simulated scattered noise as a function of range to the subject were measured for the species Carassiusauratus (common goldfish). The fish’s ability to discriminate this signal is taken to be a measure of its ability to detect scattered ambient noise. [Work supported by ONR.]
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