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PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS

Journal Abstract Search


123 related items for PubMed ID: 37963458

  • 1. An Eocene insect could hear conspecific ultrasounds and bat echolocation.
    Woodrow C, Celiker E, Montealegre-Z F.
    Curr Biol; 2023 Dec 18; 33(24):5304-5315.e3. PubMed ID: 37963458
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  • 4. Extremely high frequency sensitivity in a 'simple' ear.
    Moir HM, Jackson JC, Windmill JF.
    Biol Lett; 2013 Aug 23; 9(4):20130241. PubMed ID: 23658005
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  • 5. A narrow ear canal reduces sound velocity to create additional acoustic inputs in a microscale insect ear.
    Veitch D, Celiker E, Aldridge S, Pulver C, Soulsbury CD, Jonsson T, Woodrow C, Montealegre-Z F.
    Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A; 2021 Mar 09; 118(10):. PubMed ID: 33658360
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  • 6. Theoretical investigation of active listening behavior based on the echolocation of CF-FM bats.
    Hiraga T, Yamada Y, Kobayashi R.
    PLoS Comput Biol; 2022 Oct 09; 18(10):e1009784. PubMed ID: 36206507
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  • 8. Evolutionary origins of ultrasonic hearing and laryngeal echolocation in bats inferred from morphological analyses of the inner ear.
    Davies KT, Maryanto I, Rossiter SJ.
    Front Zool; 2013 Jan 30; 10(1):2. PubMed ID: 23360746
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  • 9. Wing mechanics and acoustic communication of a new genus of sylvan katydid (Orthoptera: Tettigoniidae: Pseudophyllinae) from the Central Cordillera cloud forest of Colombia.
    Holmes LB, Woodrow C, Sarria-S FA, Celiker E, Montealegre-Z F.
    PeerJ; 2024 Jan 30; 12():e17501. PubMed ID: 38952987
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  • 10. Keeping up with bats: dynamic auditory tuning in a moth.
    Windmill JF, Jackson JC, Tuck EJ, Robert D.
    Curr Biol; 2006 Dec 19; 16(24):2418-23. PubMed ID: 17174915
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  • 11. Hearing and hunting in red bats (Lasiurus borealis, Vespertilionidae): audiogram and ear properties.
    Obrist MK, Wenstrup JJ.
    J Exp Biol; 1998 Jan 19; 201(Pt 1):143-54. PubMed ID: 9390945
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  • 12. Evolutionary escalation: the bat-moth arms race.
    Ter Hofstede HM, Ratcliffe JM.
    J Exp Biol; 2016 Jun 01; 219(Pt 11):1589-602. PubMed ID: 27252453
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  • 13. What Does an Insect Hear? Reassessing the Role of Hearing in Predator Avoidance with Insights from Vertebrate Prey.
    Yack JE, Raven BH, Leveillee MB, Naranjo M.
    Integr Comp Biol; 2020 Nov 01; 60(5):1036-1057. PubMed ID: 32717080
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  • 14. Primitive Early Eocene bat from Wyoming and the evolution of flight and echolocation.
    Simmons NB, Seymour KL, Habersetzer J, Gunnell GF.
    Nature; 2008 Feb 14; 451(7180):818-21. PubMed ID: 18270539
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  • 15. Revisiting adaptations of neotropical katydids (Orthoptera: Tettigoniidae) to gleaning bat predation.
    Ter Hofstede H, Voigt-Heucke S, Lang A, Römer H, Page R, Faure P, Dechmann D.
    Neotrop Biodivers; 2017 Jan 01; 3(1):41-49. PubMed ID: 28261664
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  • 16. Hearing sensitivity and amplitude coding in bats are differentially shaped by echolocation calls and social calls.
    Lattenkamp EZ, Nagy M, Drexl M, Vernes SC, Wiegrebe L, Knörnschild M.
    Proc Biol Sci; 2021 Jan 13; 288(1942):20202600. PubMed ID: 33402076
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  • 17. A 50-million-year-old, three-dimensionally preserved bat skull supports an early origin for modern echolocation.
    Hand SJ, Maugoust J, Beck RMD, Orliac MJ.
    Curr Biol; 2023 Nov 06; 33(21):4624-4640.e21. PubMed ID: 37858341
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  • 18. An aerial-hawking bat uses stealth echolocation to counter moth hearing.
    Goerlitz HR, ter Hofstede HM, Zeale MR, Jones G, Holderied MW.
    Curr Biol; 2010 Sep 14; 20(17):1568-72. PubMed ID: 20727755
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  • 19. Ontogenesis of the echolocation system in the rufous horseshoe bat, Rhinolophus rouxi (audition and vocalization in early postnatal development).
    Rübsamen R.
    J Comp Physiol A; 1987 Nov 14; 161(6):899-904. PubMed ID: 3430416
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  • 20. Support for the allotonic frequency hypothesis in an insectivorous bat community.
    Schoeman MC, Jacobs DS.
    Oecologia; 2003 Jan 14; 134(1):154-62. PubMed ID: 12647192
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