首页 /研究 /Perceived Synchrony of Frog Multimodal Signal Components Is Influenced by Content and Order
PERCEPTION

Perceived Synchrony of Frog Multimodal Signal Components Is Influenced by Content and Order

Ryan C. Taylor, Rachel A. Page, Barrett A. Klein, Michael J. Ryan, Kimberly L. Hunter

发表年份
2017
引用次数
12
访问权限
开放获取

摘要

Multimodal signaling is common in communication systems. Depending on the species, individual signal components may be produced synchronously as a result of physiological constraint (fixed) or each component may be produced independently (fluid) in time. For animals that rely on fixed signals, a basic prediction is that asynchrony between the components should degrade the perception of signal salience, reducing receiver response. Male túngara frogs, Physalaemus pustulosus, produce a fixed multisensory courtship signal by vocalizing with two call components (whines and chucks) and inflating a vocal sac (visual component). Using a robotic frog, we tested female responses to variation in the temporal arrangement between acoustic and visual components. When the visual component lagged a complex call (whine + chuck), females largely rejected this asynchronous multisensory signal in favor of the complex call absent the visual cue. When the chuck component was removed from one call, but the robofrog inflation lagged the complex call, females responded strongly to the asynchronous multimodal signal. When the chuck component was removed from both calls, females reversed preference and responded positively to the asynchronous multisensory signal. When the visual component preceded the call, females responded as often to the multimodal signal as to the call alone. These data show that asynchrony of a normally fixed signal does reduce receiver responsiveness. The magnitude and overall response, however, depend on specific temporal interactions between the acoustic and visual components. The sensitivity of túngara frogs to lagging visual cues, but not leading ones, and the influence of acoustic signal content on the perception of visual asynchrony is similar to those reported in human psychophysics literature. Virtually all acoustically communicating animals must conduct auditory scene analyses and identify the source of signals. Our data suggest that some basic audiovisual neural integration processes may be at work in the vertebrate brain.

关键词

Asynchrony (computer programming)Asynchronous communicationSIGNAL (programming language)PerceptionComponent (thermodynamics)CommunicationCourtshipComputer scienceSpeech recognitionBiology

相关论文

查看 PERCEPTION 分类全部论文