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. 2013 Jun 28;4:143. doi: 10.3389/fphys.2013.00143

Figure 2.

Figure 2

The bats were recorded with microphone arrays when hanging from a perch or when flying. (A) Shows the set-up in 2012 with 11 microphones in a cross-shaped array, 7 horizontal and 3 above and 1 below the center microphone. The middle panel shows oscillograms and spectrograms of the echolocation calls emitted in the flight illustrated in the upper panel, where each vertical line is a call. The lower panel shows a spectrogram and a spectrum of one of the calls from the same sequence. (B) Shows a recording from 2008 of a perching bat. The 10 microphone array had 8 microphones on a horizontal line at the height of the bat's mouth. The middle panel shows oscillograms of a single echolocation sequence, recorded simultaneously on microphones 1, 5 and 8. Stills from the infrared video illustrate the bat turning its head from right to left. Due to the high directionality of the sonar beam, the calls are only visible on the channels at which the bat is aiming, i.e., channel 8 when the bat is facing right in the beginning and channel 1 when the bat is facing left in the end of the trial. Below are shown spectrum and spectrogram of one of the calls from this sequence.