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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: barn owls + barn owl + hearing  Related to the article below (Last Update: 5/5/2008)


KEPR 19
Baby Owls Lose Hay Bale Homes
KEPR 19, WA - May 3, 2008
Every year since, she and a few other volunteers have rescued about 50 owl babies a year. "We realized we had a baby problem, barn owl babies, ...
Nature - Barn Owl Nest LIVE Online
Garden and Green, UK - May 1, 2008
The trust has two cameras set up so people can watch the developments down on the farm in Cornwall, where Barn Owls have nested since 1994. ...
New mammal record for Ireland
Wildlife Extra, UK - Apr 30, 2008
John Lusby, Barn Owl Research Officer for BirdWatch Ireland, and John O'Halloran are currently carrying out research to identify factors behind the recent ...
Trip offered glimpse of wildlife beyond the pond
LubbockOnline.com, TX - May 3, 2008
Forty birds are on their flying "team" and we were delighted to watch "Elmo," a great horned owl; two barn owls; two Harris hawks; two "little owls" (Athen ...

Newbury Weekly News Group
Bid to help barn owls
Newbury Weekly News Group, UK - Apr 14, 2008
Countryside and community groups such as The Ramblers, the Wychwood Barn Owl project, Butterfly Conservation volunteers, landowners and farmers discussed ...
Shrew 'key to helping owl numbers'
The Press Association - Apr 28, 2008
They found unfamiliar remains in regurgitated food, known as pellets, of barn owls and kestrels at 15 locations in Tipperary and Limerick last autumn and ...

Times of Malta
Pet on the loose? (1)
Times of Malta, Malta - Apr 28, 2008
The owl is easily recognisable as a captivity-bred specimen. Escaped birds happen very regularly and one can find all kinds of birds, including barn owls, ...
Birdman of Scotswood keeping unusual hobby in the family
ChronicleLive, UK - May 3, 2008
His current cohort includes European eagle owl Layla, snowy owl Gilly and George the barn owl. Eagle owls are the largest species of owl. ...
Nests aid return of barn owl
Yorkshire Evening Post, UK - Apr 9, 2008
By Staff Copy BARN owls are on the increase in Ryedale and the rest of North Yorkshire thanks to a joint initiative by Natural England and the Probation ...
Forest department officials examine the owl before releasing it in ...
Calcutta Telegraph, India - Apr 30, 2008
A forest official said barn owls were slowly becoming extinct in the region. The verdict from experts: prompt measures should be taken to save this rare ...
Source: Google News

Acoustic Location of Prey by Barn Owls (Tyto Alba) -
RS PAYNE - Journal of Experimental Biology, 1971 - jeb.biologists.org
... that the only possible explanation of how a barn owl in total darkness can determine
the direc- tion in which a live mouse is facing is by hearing it move from ...

Mechanisms of sound localization in the barn owl(Tyto alba)
EI Knudsen, M Konishi - Journal of Comparative Physiology? A, 1979 - Springer
... so that the stimulus intensity ranged between 20 and 40 dB above hearing threshold. ...
as long as the distance between the owl's ears (for the barn owl this means ...

Monaural occlusion alters sound localization during a sensitive period in the barn owl -
EI Knudsen, SD Esterly, PF Knudsen - Journal of Neuroscience, 1984 - neuroscience.org
... Tuning of Neurons in the Visual Forebrain of the Behaving Barn Owl J Neurophysiol ...
ZD Jiang, H. Matsuda, CH Parsons, and AJ King Conductive Hearing Loss Produces ...

[BOOK] Barn Owls: Predator-Prey Relationships and Conservation
I Taylor - 1994 - books.google.com
... Contents Preface xiii 1 Introduction 1 1.1 The barn owl: briefly 2 1.2 Study areas
in ... 47 4.1 General foraging adaptations 48 4.2 Vision 52 4.3 Hearing 52 4.4 ...

[PDF] Instructed learning in the auditory localization pathway of the barn owl -
EI Knudsen - Nature, 2002 - natureasia.com
... over the lifetime of an animal as a result of hearing loss and ... cues based on experience
3?6 . Adaptiveadjustment of sound localization by barn owls has been ...
-

… the spatial tuning of auditory units in the optic tectum during a sensitive period in the barn owl -
EI Knudsen - Journal of Neuroscience, 1985 - neuroscience.org
... in the Neural Representation of Auditory Space in the Barn Owl's Inferior Colliculus
J ... H. Matsuda, CH Parsons, and AJ King Conductive Hearing Loss Produces a ...

Neuronal and behavioral sensitivity to binaural time differences in the owl -
A Moiseff, M Konishi - Journal of Neuroscience, 1981 - neuroscience.org
... of Auditory Space in the Barn Owl's Inferior Colliculus J ... page JI Gold and EI Knudsen
Hearing Impairment Induces ... in the Optic Tectum of Young Owls J Neurophysiol ...

Neural maps of interaural time and intensity differences in the optic tectum of the barn owl -
JF Olsen, EI Knudsen, SD Esterly - Journal of Neuroscience, 1989 - neuroscience.org
... page JI Gold and EI Knudsen Hearing Impairment Induces ... in the Optic Tectum of Young
Owls J Neurophysiol ... in the Forebrain Gaze Fields of the Barn Owl J. Neurosci ...

Sound localization by the barn owl (Tyto alba) measured with the search coil technique
EI Knudsen, GG Blasdel, M Konishi - Journal of Comparative Physiology A: Sensory, Neural, and …, 1979 - Springer
... Upon hearing the sound, the owl initiated head movement with a median latency of
100 ms; the shortest response latency was ... Sound Localization by the Barn Owl ...

Head-related transfer functions of the barn owl: measurement and neural responses -
CH Keller, K Hartung, TT Takahashi - Hearing Research, 1998 - Elsevier
... a virtual auditory space for the barn owl, Tyto alba, a highly successful auditory
predator that has become a well-established model for hearing research. ...

Source: Google Scholar

Hearing skills of barn owls could map way to find problems in humans

UO team documents neuron activity, brain mapping and behavioral responsiveness

The hearing precision that lets common barn owls find prey is helping researchers fine tune their quest to diagnose a variety of problems rooted in the human brain, not only with hearing but also with behavior and potentially damaged areas.

University of Oregon researchers have found that barn owls (Tyto alba) are better able to track changes in the location of a noise, such as that made by a potential meal, when the sound source moves horizontally than when the sound changes direction vertically. The discovery was made using an infrared-monitoring procedure that measures pupil dilation responses that are influenced by changes in sound sources around an owl.

“When we are looking at problems of spatial localization, or how to locate sound in a space, the barn owl provides a great system,” said Avinash D.S. Bala, a researcher in the University of Oregon’s Institute of Neuroscience and lead author of a new study.

The findings – published in Aug. 1 issue of PLoS ONE, a journal of the non-profit Public Library of Science – confirms and solidifies the results of an earlier study (Nature, Aug. 14, 2003), in which Bala and colleagues first documented the brain mapping of firing neurons to horizontal changes in the source of noises in the owl’s brain.

Bala was the lead author on both projects, which were done in collaboration with former UO researcher Matthew W. Spitzer, who now is at Monash University in Australia, and principal investigator Terry T. Takahashi, a UO professor of biology and researcher in the Institute of Neuroscience.

“The barn owl has a portion of the midbrain which serves as a map,” Bala said. “Neuron activity can be traced in the map as sound moves. Looking at this map, you can decipher which sounds are being received more actively.”

The new study, in which conclusions were based on the recordings of 62 neurons that represent auditory space, also sheds light on how outside information is converted into electrical activity and transformed into behavior.

“The brain, in the case of spatial hearing, judges neuronal activity in a democratic manner,” Bala said. “It listens to the responses of neurons, and it goes with an approximate average of responses. This has the advantage of reducing environmental noise that is inducing false positives, which would be more common if the owl was depending on only a few neurons. Overall sensitivity might go down, but the probability of an owl actually hitting its prey becomes much higher.”

The monitoring procedure Bala and colleagues have devised, which is in the early stages of human application, has the potential to use the eyes, through changes in the size of the pupil, as a gateway to the human brain. The system would allow for measuring the response to different aspects of sound, such as volume, pitch and location, as well as diagnosing basic sensory deficits and identify areas of damage in the brain.

The National Institute of Deafness and Communication Disorders and the McKnight Foundation, a private Minnesota-based philanthropic organization, funded the work through grants to Takahashi. Spitzer was supported by a grant from the National Institutes of Health.

Sources: Avinash D.S. Bala, postdoctoral researcher, Institute of Neuroscience, 541-346-4544, avinash@uoregon.edu; Terry Takahashi, professor of biology, 541-346-4544.

Links: The paper is available at: http://www.plosone.org/doi/pone.0000675;
Avinash Bala’s site: http://darkwing.uoregon.edu/~avinash/;
Terry Takahashi faculty page: http://www.neuro.uoregon.edu/ionmain/htdocs/faculty/takahash.html;
UO Institute of Neuroscience: http://uoneuro.uoregon.edu/

 
 
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