Birdsong: motor function and the evolution of communication
Communication differs from other behaviors in the potential for an arbitrary relationship between a signal's function and the motor patterns used to produce it. Also, signals often incorporate motor patterns that have been co-opted from non-signal behaviors, resulting in a linkage between commu...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Seminars in the neurosciences 1992, Vol.4 (6), p.385-390 |
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creator | Nowicki, Stephen Westneat, Mark Hoese, William |
description | Communication differs from other behaviors in the potential for an arbitrary relationship between a signal's function and the motor patterns used to produce it. Also, signals often incorporate motor patterns that have been co-opted from non-signal behaviors, resulting in a linkage between communication and other behaviors using the same functional systems. We examine possible evolutionary consequences of these attributes of communication, using birdsong as a focus. Syringeal function provides a case where co-adaptation with other behaviors is weak. By contrast, functional systems of the vocal tract have evolved in response to competing influences of divergent selective pressures. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1016/1044-5765(92)90046-5 |
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subjects | Aves co-adaptation motor programs ritualization syrinx vocal tract |
title | Birdsong: motor function and the evolution of communication |
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