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White-crowned sparrows, like this one shown singing in a
tree, were used in a University of Utah study that examined
how birds learn to sing -- and that may shed light on how
humans learn to speak.
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Credit: Franz Goller, University of Utah
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Dec. 8, 2004 – University of Utah scientists
taught baby sparrows to sing a complete song even though the birds
were exposed only to overlapping segments of the tune rather than
the full melody. The study provides clues about how musical memories
are stored in the brain and how those memories help birds learn
to sing.
The results also may have implications for how people learn language,
says Gary J. Rose, a University of Utah professor of biology and
principal author of the study published in the Dec. 9 issue of
the journal Nature.
“There are strong parallels between song learning in birds
and speech learning in humans,” he says. “Like humans,
songbirds learn particular regional dialects, so they represent
excellent opportunities to study the physiological basis of language.
If we can understand something about how song is represented in
their brains, then maybe we can better understand how speech learning
occurs in humans and, when it goes awry, how we might go about
fixing it.”
Study co-author Stephanie Plamondon, a doctoral student in neuroscience,
added: “We were able to give the birds just pieces of the
song, and they were able to assemble a complete song from those
pieces. … A full song or a complete sentence isn’t
required to learn the song, only an association between phrases
[segments] of the song.”
Other authors of the study were Franz Goller, an associate professor
of biology; Brenton Cooper, a postdoctoral researcher in Goller’s
laboratory; and Howard Gritton and Alexander Baugh, who worked
on the study as undergraduates, then as technicians.
This is Your Brain; This is Your Brain with Experience
Songbirds must hear their species’ song when they are young
or they fail to learn to sing it. Such birds “produce very
simple songs, mostly repeated whistles,” Rose says.
Birds learn to sing in stages. First, there is a “subsong”
phase in which they babble softly, almost like human infants.
Then, they undergo a “plastic” phase when they practice
singing for eight or nine months, and “when the bird is
producing song and comparing it to the memory he has formed,”
Plamondon says. After that, the birds undergo “crystallization,”
which means their song is crystallized or essentially set in stone
– at least until the next mating season, when some changes
can occur.
The Utah biologists tested a theory dealing with the long-term
“auditory memory” formed by young sparrows when they
first hear other sparrows sing. Scientists want to know how that
memory is stored in the brain, and how that memory is used as
the birds learn to sing weeks later.
The complete white-crowned sparrow song has five segments or snippets
– researchers call them “phrases” – represented
by the letters ABCDE. A is a characteristic opening whistle; B
is a “note complex,” or several musical notes in a
specific sequence; C is a buzzing sound; D is a trilling sound
and E is another note complex.
Plamondon says song learning is unlikely to be completely genetic
because white-crowned sparrows in different regions have different
dialects; they vary in how they assemble song segments. Rose says
there is no evidence the birds use short-term memory to remember
their song when they are tutored, and it’s unlikely the
sparrows carry some sort of internal instructions on how to assemble
song segments into a complete song.
Instead, the new study indicates the sparrows’ characteristic
song is imprinted on their brain like a long-term memory, and
not as a complete song, but in pieces. Rose and colleagues propose
that circuits of certain nerve cells only detect – and only
need to detect – pairs of song segments (AB, BC, CD, DE)
for the birds to learn to sing. That is because each pair of segments
overlaps the next, allowing the bird to figure out how to string
together the complete melody.
Rose says nerve circuits that detect pairs of song segments are
shaped as the birds practice singing. “In many cases, experience
shapes the function of the brain,” he says. “If humans
don’t have normal vision during the first few weeks of life,
they become functionally blind. If infants don’t hear speech
they obviously won’t learn to produce a verbal language.”
He adds: “If experience early in life is essential for shaping
the function of the brain, then we need to understand how that
happens. And songbirds are one of the few cases other than humans
that actually learn their verbal language and have to be tutored.”
(The others are the cetaceans – whales, dolphins and porpoises
– and perhaps bats.)
The Bird Song Experiments
The researchers first recorded songs from white-crowned sparrows
in Utah’s Wasatch Range. They digitized the recordings so
they could break them into five segments or snippets they called
“phrases.”
Rose and colleagues obtained permits to capture sparrow nestlings,
hand-feeding and raising them in the laboratory in sound-proof
cages so they didn’t hear each other.
When the sparrows were 2 weeks old, the researchers began trying
to teach them to sing by playing them segments of the complete
song in different orders. Separate 90-minute tutoring sessions
were conducted for each bird twice daily for 60 days.
In the first experiment, the scientists played one segment or
phrase of the sparrow song at a time, separated by 2.5-second
silences. They played the segments in reverse order – E,
then D, then C, B and A – to control against the birds simply
storing what they heard (ABCDE) in short-term memory and repeating
it. The nine birds in this experiment could not string the segments
together in the right order to sing the entire song ABCDE.
Next, eight young sparrows were played two segments or snippets
of their song at a time. Each pair of segments was in the correct
order, but the pairs of segments were played backward –
DE, then CD, BC and AB.
Because each pair of song segments overlapped another one, these
birds were able to string the segments together in the correct
order and sing the full song ABCDE. Plamondon says that when birds
hear two song segments at a time, they implicitly learn the rules
for putting all five segments together.
In a final experiment, five sparrows heard pairs of song segments,
with each pair in reverse order: BA, then CB, DC and ED. The birds
again learned to string the segments together, but because the
segments were reversed, they sang with the segments strung together
backward – EDCBA.
Rose says the reversal was surprising because it shows training
can overcome sparrows’ innate tendency to start their song
with a whistle (represented by A).
The sparrows’ ability to construct a complete song from
its pieces by knowing how the pieces fit together is comparable
to completing a jigsaw puzzle, says Rose.
“You don’t have to know what the puzzle picture looks
like, just the rules for putting the pieces together,” for
example, that they fit like locks and keys, he says.
Rose believes birds perfect their songs because they start combining
various song segments and retain only those pairs (AB, BC, CD,
DE) that match the memory of what they are tutored and reject
others (such as AC or EC) that are not reinforced by tutoring.
This may involve interaction between basal ganglia – brain
structures that control movement – and nerve circuits that
control vocal movements, Rose says, noting birds can sing without
basal ganglia, “but they can’t learn and maintain
the song.”
“The relevance of these findings is that this may be representative
of how learned sequences of movements of various types work,”
he adds. “A jazz musician, for example, learns the rules
for making transition from one note to the next, and can compose
full songs by observing those rules.”
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