Object recognition, essential to
many animals, often occurs underwater and in poor visibility conditions
for bottlenose dolphins. Bottlenose dolphins can use sound through
their ability to echolocate in order to recognize objects. Echoic
object recognition is an unusual faculty that offers rich research
opportunities and is the focus of this article. This review begins
with a brief overview of the dolphin’s echolocation system
followed by considerations of echoic object discrimination, echoic
object constancy, the use of echo trains versus individual echoes
for object recognition, and extraction of object feature information
from echoes. The authors present new data relating the acoustic
analysis of objects with a dolphin’s ability to recognize
those objects. The results highlight the potential uses for simultaneous
analysis of acoustic and behavioral data in order to understand
better which features of echoes and echo trains allow the dolphin
to recognize objects across vision and echolocation. |
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