iScience (Jun 2024)

Auditory processing of communication calls in interacting bats

  • Angeles Salles,
  • Emely Loscalzo,
  • Jessica Montoya,
  • Rosa Mendoza,
  • Kevin M. Boergens,
  • Cynthia F. Moss

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27, no. 6
p. 109872

Abstract

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Summary: There is strong evidence that social context plays a role in the processing of acoustic signals. Yet, the circuits and mechanisms that govern this process are still not fully understood. The insectivorous big brown bat, Eptesicus fuscus, emits a wide array of communication calls, including food-claiming calls, aggressive calls, and appeasement calls. We implemented a competitive foraging task to explore the influence of behavioral context on auditory midbrain responses to conspecific social calls. We recorded neural population responses from the inferior colliculus (IC) of freely interacting bats and analyzed data with respect to social context. Analysis of our neural recordings from the IC shows stronger population responses to individual calls during social events. For the first time, neural recordings from the IC of a copulating bat were obtained. Our results indicate that social context enhances neuronal population responses to social vocalizations in the bat IC.

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