4.5 Article

Reconsidering tympanal-acoustic interactions leads to an improved model of auditory acuity in a parasitoid fly

期刊

BIOINSPIRATION & BIOMIMETICS
卷 18, 期 3, 页码 -

出版社

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1748-3190/acbffa

关键词

acoustics; binaural hearing; biomechanics; mathematical modeling; sensory modeling; Ormia ochracea; bioinspiration

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Although most organisms use neurological structures to amplify sounds for sound localization, the parasitoid fly Ormia ochracea has mechanically coupled hearing organs that allow it to accurately locate sound sources. Previous models of Ormia ochracea's hearing mechanics have limitations at higher sound angles, but a new quasi-two-dimensional (q2D) model incorporating morphology-based features significantly improves accuracy (average errors under 10%). This improved biomechanical model could inform the design of new microscale directional microphones and small-scale acoustic sensor systems.
Although most binaural organisms locate sound sources using neurological structures to amplify the sounds they hear, some animals use mechanically coupled hearing organs instead. One of these animals, the parasitoid fly Ormia ochracea (O. ochracea), has astoundingly accurate sound localization abilities. It can locate objects in the azimuthal plane with a precision of 2 degrees, equal to that of humans, despite an intertympanal distance of only 0.5 mm, which is less than 1/100th of the wavelength of the sound emitted by the crickets that it parasitizes. O. ochracea accomplishes this feat via mechanically coupled tympana that interact with incoming acoustic pressure waves to amplify differences in the signals received at the two ears. In 1995, Miles et al developed a model of hearing mechanics in O. ochracea that represents the tympana as flat, front-facing prosternal membranes, though they lie on a convex surface at an angle from the flies' frontal and transverse planes. The model works well for incoming sound angles less than +/- 30 degrees but suffers from reduced accuracy (up to 60% error) at higher angles compared to response data acquired from O. ochracea specimens. Despite this limitation, it has been the basis for bio-inspired microphone designs for decades. Here, we present critical improvements to this classic hearing model based on information from three-dimensional reconstructions of O. ochracea's tympanal organ. We identified the orientation of the tympana with respect to a frontal plane and the azimuthal angle segment between the tympana as morphological features essential to the flies' auditory acuity, and hypothesized a differentiated mechanical response to incoming sound on the ipsi- and contralateral sides that depend on these features. We incorporated spatially-varying model coefficients representing this asymmetric response, making a new quasi-two-dimensional (q2D) model. The q2D model has high accuracy (average errors of under 10%) for all incoming sound angles. This improved biomechanical model may inform the design of new microscale directional microphones and other small-scale acoustic sensor systems.

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