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. 1982 Dec;96(6):926-44.

Hearing in the elephant (Elephas maximus): absolute sensitivity, frequency discrimination, and sound localization

  • PMID: 7153389

Hearing in the elephant (Elephas maximus): absolute sensitivity, frequency discrimination, and sound localization

R S Heffner et al. J Comp Physiol Psychol. 1982 Dec.

Abstract

A young Indian elephant was tested to determine its absolute sensitivity, frequency-discrimination thresholds, and sound-localization thresholds. The elephant was found to have an audibility curve similar to that of other mammals but one that is more sensitive to low frequencies and less sensitive to high frequencies than any other mammalian audiogram including human's. The elephant's sensitivity to frequency differences at low frequencies was found to equal that of humans. Finally, the elephant was found to be very accurate at localizing sounds in the azimuthal plane, with thresholds around 1 degree for broad-band noise. The elephant's ability to localize pure tones suggested that it could use both binaural time- and intensity-difference cues to localize sound.

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