نتایج جستجو برای: invective song

تعداد نتایج: 12185  

Journal: :Hormones and behavior 2009
John Meitzen Christopher K Thompson Heejung Choi David J Perkel Eliot A Brenowitz

Seasonal changes in behavior and in its underlying neural substrate are common across animal taxa. These changes are often triggered by steroid sex hormones. Song in seasonally breeding songbirds provides an excellent example of this phenomenon. In these species, dramatic seasonal changes mediated by testosterone and its metabolites occur in adult song behavior and in the neural circuitry contr...

Journal: :Journal of neurobiology 2005
Teresa A Nick Masakazu Konishi

The zebra finch acquires its song by first memorizing a model song from a tutor and then matching its own vocalizations to the memory trace of the tutor song, called a template. Neural mechanisms underlying this process require a link between the neural memory trace and the premotor song circuitry, which drives singing. We now report that a premotor song nucleus responds more to the tutor song ...

Journal: :The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 1996
M S Lewicki

Auditory neurons in the forebrain nucleus HVc (hyperstriatum ventrale pars caudale) are highly sensitive to the temporal structure of the bird's own song. These "song-specific" neurons respond strongly to forward song, weakly to the song with the order of the syllables reversed, and little or not at all to reversed song. To investigate the cellular mechanisms underlying these responses, in vivo...

Journal: :Evolution; international journal of organic evolution 2017
Benjamin G Freeman Graham A Montgomery Dolph Schluter

Plasticity is often thought to accelerate trait evolution and speciation. For example, plasticity in birdsong may partially explain why clades of song learners are more diverse than related clades with innate song. This "song learning" hypothesis predicts that (1) differences in song traits evolve faster in song learners, and (2) behavioral discrimination against allopatric song (a proxy for pr...

Journal: :The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 1997
S M Woolley E W Rubel

Male birds of age-limited song-learning species develop their full song repertoires in the first year of life. For this type of song learner, once song is stabilized in adulthood, it is highly stereotyped and stable over time. Traditionally, it has been believed that age-limited song learners do not depend on auditory feedback for the maintenance of adult song. A recent report, however, showed ...

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2014
Michael Weiss Henrike Hultsch Iris Adam Constance Scharff Silke Kipper

The singing of song birds can form complex signal systems comprised of numerous subunits sung with distinct combinatorial properties that have been described as syntax-like. This complexity has inspired inquiries into similarities of bird song to human language; but the quantitative analysis and description of song sequences is a challenging task. In this study, we analysed song sequences of co...

2012
Johan J. Bolhuis Sharon M. H. Gobes Nienke J. Terpstra Ardie M. den Boer-Visser Matthijs A. Zandbergen

Like many other songbird species, male zebra finches learn their song from a tutor early in life. Song learning in birds has strong parallels with speech acquisition in human infants at both the behavioral and neural levels. Forebrain nuclei in the 'song system' are important for the sensorimotor acquisition and production of song, while caudomedial pallial brain regions outside the song system...

Journal: :Journal of neurobiology 1997
K Okanoya A Yamaguchi

Songbirds develop their songs by imitating songs of adults. For song learning to proceed normally, the bird's hearing must remain intact throughout the song development process. In many species, song learning takes place during one period early in life, and no more new song elements are learned thereafter. In these so-called close-ended learners, it has long been assumed that once song developm...

Journal: :The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 2012
James D Darling Meagan E Jones Charles P Nicklin

The use of playback experiments to study humpback whale song was assessed. Singers clearly detected playback song while singing and with other singers in the distance. Singers approached or joined song similar to their own from as far as 800 m but did not do so for a different (foreign) song. In one compound trial, on the playback of different song, the singer moved away and continued singing; ...

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