Bilateral brain activity in auditory regions is necessary for successful vocal learning in songbirds

•Auditory regions in both hemispheres are essential for successful song acquisition.•Spectral and temporal aspects of song are represented in different hemispheres.•Specific aspects of birdsong learning are lateralized, like human language. In humans and songbirds, neuronal activation for language a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neuroscience letters 2020-01, Vol.718, p.134730-134730, Article 134730
Hauptverfasser: Pagliaro, Alexa H., Arya, Payal, Piristine, Hande C., Lord, Julia S., Gobes, Sharon M.H.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Auditory regions in both hemispheres are essential for successful song acquisition.•Spectral and temporal aspects of song are represented in different hemispheres.•Specific aspects of birdsong learning are lateralized, like human language. In humans and songbirds, neuronal activation for language and song shifts from bilateral- or diffuse-activation to left-hemispheric dominance while proficiency increases. Further parallels exist at the behavioural level: unstructured juvenile vocalizations become highly stereotyped adult vocalizations through a process of trial and error learning. Greater left-hemispheric dominance in the songbird caudomedial Nidopallium (NCM), a Wernicke-like region, is related to better imitation of the tutor’s song learned early in development, indicating a role for the left NCM in forming auditory memories. Here, we hypothesize that inhibition of the left NCM during interaction with a song tutor would impair imitation of the tutor’s song more than inhibition of the right NCM. We infused a transient sodium channel blocker (TTX) immediately prior to tutoring sessions in either the left or right auditory lobule of previously isolated juvenile male zebra finches (Taeniopygia guttata). Upon maturation, both right-infused and left-infused birds' tutor song imitation was significantly impaired. Left-infused birds also showed less consistency in the rhythmic stability of their song as well as increased pitch, suggesting a subtle division of function between the left and right auditory lobules.
ISSN:0304-3940
1872-7972
DOI:10.1016/j.neulet.2019.134730