Publication | Open Access
Understanding and mimicking the dual optimality of the fly ear
69
Citations
17
References
2013
Year
AeroacousticsAudio ElectroacousticsEardrum SeparationMotor ControlAnatomyAcoustic SensorSpeaker LocalizationNoiseFly Ormia OchraceaAuditory ScienceAcoustic AnalysisMultisensory IntegrationHealth SciencesCognitive ScienceAuditory ResearchHuman HearingNervous SystemDual OptimalityBioacousticsNeuroanatomyAuditory PhysiologyAuditory ComputationMedicineAuditory System
The fly Ormia ochracea has the remarkable ability, given an eardrum separation of only 520 μm, to pinpoint the 5 kHz chirp of its cricket host. Previous research showed that the two eardrums are mechanically coupled, which amplifies the directional cues. We have now performed a mechanics and optimization analysis which reveals that the right coupling strength is key: it results in simultaneously optimized directional sensitivity and directional cue linearity at 5 kHz. We next demonstrated that this dual optimality is replicable in a synthetic device and can be tailored for a desired frequency. Finally, we demonstrated a miniature sensor endowed with this dual-optimality at 8 kHz with unparalleled sound localization. This work provides a quantitative and mechanistic explanation for the fly's sound-localization ability from a new perspective, and it provides a framework for the development of fly-ear inspired sensors to overcoming a previously-insurmountable size constraint in engineered sound-localization systems.
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