4.5 Article

Dolphin conditioned hearing attenuation in response to repetitive tones with increasing level

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE ACOUSTICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA
Volume 153, Issue 1, Pages 496-504

Publisher

ACOUSTICAL SOC AMER AMER INST PHYSICS
DOI: 10.1121/10.0016868

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The study aimed to determine if dolphins would reduce their hearing sensitivity in response to an intense tone presented at a fixed rate but increasing level, without an otherwise explicit warning. Results showed that dolphins can learn the timing of repetitive noise and may reduce their hearing sensitivity if the sound pressure level is high enough, presumably to self-mitigate the noise effects.
All species of toothed whales studied to date can learn to reduce their hearing sensitivity when warned of an impending intense sound; however, the specific conditions under which animals will employ this technique are not well understood. The present study was focused on determining whether dolphins would reduce their hearing sensitivity in response to an intense tone presented at a fixed rate but increasing level, without an otherwise explicit warning. Auditory brainstem responses (ABRs) to intermittent, 57-kHz tone bursts were continuously measured in two bottlenose dolphins as they were exposed to a series of 2-s, 40-kHz tones at fixed time intervals of 20, 25, or 29 s and at sound pressure levels (SPLs) increasing from 120 to 160 dB re 1 mu Pa. Results from one dolphin showed consistent ABR attenuation preceding intense tones when the SPL exceeded similar to 140-150 dB re 1 mu Pa and the tone interval was 20 s. ABR attenuation with 25- or 29-s intense tone intervals was inconsistent. The second dolphin showed similar, but more subtle, effects. The results show dolphins can learn the timing of repetitive noise and may reduce their hearing sensitivity if the SPL is high enough, presumably to self-mitigate the noise effects.

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