Two neural streams, one voice: Pathways for theme and variation in the songbird brain

Highlights • Birdsong is learned in a manner similar to human speech. • Two premotor pathways generate the theme and variation of song, but their relative influence shifts during learning. • In adult birds, auditory feedback and social stimuli influence the gain of the dual premotor pathways. • The...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neuroscience 2014-09, Vol.277, p.806-817
Hauptverfasser: Bertram, R, Daou, A, Hyson, R.L, Johnson, F, Wu, W
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creator Bertram, R
Daou, A
Hyson, R.L
Johnson, F
Wu, W
description Highlights • Birdsong is learned in a manner similar to human speech. • Two premotor pathways generate the theme and variation of song, but their relative influence shifts during learning. • In adult birds, auditory feedback and social stimuli influence the gain of the dual premotor pathways. • The neural composition of birdsong involves axial swaths of interconnected neurons.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2014.07.061
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subjects Animals
Auditory Perception - physiology
basal ganglia
Brain - growth & development
Brain - physiology
Feedback, Psychological - physiology
Finches - growth & development
Finches - physiology
Humans
Learning - physiology
Male
motor memory
Neural Pathways - growth & development
Neural Pathways - physiology
Neurology
Neurons - physiology
premotor cortex
sensory-motor integration
Taeniopygia guttata
vocal learning
Vocalization, Animal - physiology
title Two neural streams, one voice: Pathways for theme and variation in the songbird brain
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