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Journal ArticleDOI

BIRDSONG AND HUMAN SPEECH: Common Themes and Mechanisms

TLDR
Human speech and birdsong have numerous parallels, with striking similarities in how sensory experience is internalized and used to shape vocal outputs, and how learning is enhanced during a critical period of development.
Abstract
Human speech and birdsong have numerous parallels. Both humans and songbirds learn their complex vocalizations early in life, exhibiting a strong dependence on hearing the adults they will imitate, as well as themselves as they practice, and a waning of this dependence as they mature. Innate predispositions for perceiving and learning the correct sounds exist in both groups, although more evidence of innate descriptions of species-specific signals exists in songbirds, where numerous species of vocal learners have been compared. Humans also share with songbirds an early phase of learning that is primarily perceptual, which then serves to guide later vocal production. Both humans and songbirds have evolved a complex hierarchy of specialized forebrain areas in which motor and auditory centers interact closely, and which control the lower vocal motor areas also found in nonlearners. In both these vocal learners, however, how auditory feedback of self is processed in these brain areas is surprisingly unclear. Finally, humans and songbirds have similar critical periods for vocal learning, with a much greater ability to learn early in life. In both groups, the capacity for late vocal learning may be decreased by the act of learning itself, as well as by biological factors such as the hormones of puberty. Although some features of birdsong and speech are clearly not analogous, such as the capacity of language for meaning, abstraction, and flexible associations, there are striking similarities in how sensory experience is internalized and used to shape vocal outputs, and how learning is enhanced during a critical period of development. Similar neural mechanisms may therefore be involved.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Dopamine physiology in the basal ganglia of male zebra finches during social stimulation.

TL;DR: The findings suggest that changes in extracellular DA levels can be stimulated similarly by very different social contexts (courtship and interaction with tutor), and influenced potently by dopaminergic and noradrenergic drugs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Interconnected growing self-organizing maps for auditory and semantic acquisition modeling.

TL;DR: The Interconnected Growing Self-Organizing Maps (I-GSOM) algorithm, which takes associations between auditory information and semantic information into consideration, is introduced and can be interpreted as a biologically-inspired neurocomputational model.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sex differences in behavioural and neural responsiveness to mate calls in a parrot

TL;DR: In males, but not females, mate calls evoked significantly fewer vocal responses than unfamiliar calls at one month after separation, the first evidence suggesting sex differences in functional asymmetry of brain regions related to recognition of learned vocalisation in birds is suggested.
Journal ArticleDOI

From birdsong to speech: a plea for comparative approaches

TL;DR: With such aspects as a reference, birdsong is an excellent biological model for memory research and also an appropriate system for the study of evolutionary strategies in a very successful class of organisms.
Journal ArticleDOI

Zebra finches are able to learn affixation-like patterns

TL;DR: It is shown that an asymmetry in attending to different affixations is not restricted to human languages, and birds trained with suffixation as Go pattern showed clear evidence of using both prefix and suffix, while those trained with the prefix as the Go stimulus used primarily the prefix.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Hearing lips and seeing voices

TL;DR: The study reported here demonstrates a previously unrecognised influence of vision upon speech perception, on being shown a film of a young woman's talking head in which repeated utterances of the syllable [ba] had been dubbed on to lip movements for [ga].
Book

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TL;DR: The coming of language occurs at about the same age in every healthy child throughout the world as mentioned in this paper, strongly supporting the concept that genetically determined processes of maturation, rather than env...
Journal ArticleDOI

Statistical Learning by 8-Month-Old Infants

TL;DR: The present study shows that a fundamental task of language acquisition, segmentation of words from fluent speech, can be accomplished by 8-month-old infants based solely on the statistical relationships between neighboring speech sounds.
Book

Rules and Representations

TL;DR: Hornstein this article discusses the Biological Basis of Language Capacities and Language and Unconscious Knowledge Notes Index (LUCI) for language and unconscious knowledge in the context of natural language processing.
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