Sensitivity and interaural intensity difference (IID) dependence on sound frequency and direction was measured in an Amazon river dolphin Inia geoffrensis by recording the auditory nerve evoked response from the body surface. The maximal sensitivity in the horizontal plane was found when the sound direction was 5° to 10° ipsilateral to the recorded ear; the direction dependence of sensitivity was more pronounced at higher frequencies than at lower ones. The IID reached its peak at small azimuthal angles (7.5° to 15°) and higher sound frequencies (100 kHz), or at large azimuthal angles (30° to 45°) and lower sound frequencies (20 to 30 kHz). Each sound direction featured its specific pattern of spectral sensitivity and of interaural spectral difference. The interaural spectral difference fluctuated within a range of more than 20 dB depending on sound direction. The data indicate that interaural intensity as well as spectral difference may be cues for binaural localization of sound direction by dolphins.
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June 1993
June 01 1993
Direction‐dependent spectral sensitivity and interaural spectral difference in a dolphin: Evoked potential study
Alexander Ya. Supin;
Alexander Ya. Supin
Institute of Evolutionary Morphology and Ecology of Animals, Russian Academy of Sciences, 33 Leninsky Prosp., 117071 Moscow, Russia
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Vladimir V. Popov
Vladimir V. Popov
Institute of Evolutionary Morphology and Ecology of Animals, Russian Academy of Sciences, 33 Leninsky Prosp., 117071 Moscow, Russia
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J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 93, 3490–3495 (1993)
Article history
Received:
September 15 1992
Accepted:
February 05 1993
Citation
Alexander Ya. Supin, Vladimir V. Popov; Direction‐dependent spectral sensitivity and interaural spectral difference in a dolphin: Evoked potential study. J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 1 June 1993; 93 (6): 3490–3495. https://doi.org/10.1121/1.405679
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