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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

The neuromuscular control of birdsong.

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TLDR
Reversible paralysis of the vocal organ during song learning in young birds reveals that motor practice is particularly important in late plastic song around the time of song crystallization in order for normal adult song to develop.
Abstract
Birdsong requires complex learned motor skills involving the coordination of respiratory, vocal organ and craniomandibular muscle groups. Recent studies have added to our understanding of how these vocal subsystems function and interact during song production. The respiratory rhythm determines the temporal pattern of song. Sound is produced during expiration and each syllable is typically followed by a small inspiration, except at the highest syllable repetition rates when a pattern of pulsatile expiration is used. Both expiration and inspiration are active processes. The oscine vocal organ, the syrinx, contains two separate sound sources at the cranial end of each bronchus, each with independent motor control. Dorsal syringeal muscles regulate the timing of phonation by adducting the sound-generating labia into the air stream. Ventral syringeal muscles have an important role in determining the fundamental frequency of the sound. Different species use the two sides of their vocal organ in different ways to achieve the particular acoustic properties of their song. Reversible paralysis of the vocal organ during song learning in young birds reveals that motor practice is particularly important in late plastic song around the time of song crystallization in order for normal adult song to develop. Even in adult crystallized song, expiratory muscles use sensory feedback to make compensatory adjustments to perturbations of respiratory pressure. The stereotyped beak movements that accompany song appear to have a role in suppressing harmonics, particularly at low frequencies.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The honesty of bird song: multiple constraints for multiple traits

TL;DR: A review of the existing evidence for each of the constraints on the evolution of sexually selected male signals, revealing some major gaps in knowledge of this fascinating biological system.
Journal ArticleDOI

What songbirds teach us about learning

TL;DR: With the discovery and investigation of discrete brain structures required for singing, songbirds are providing insights into neural mechanisms of learning and are addressing such basic issues in neuroscience as perceptual and sensorimotor learning, developmental regulation of plasticity, and the control and function of adult neurogenesis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Song as an honest signal of developmental stress in the zebra finch (Taeniopygia guttata).

TL;DR: The results demonstrate that both dietary restriction and elevated corticosterone levels significantly reduced nestling growth rates and that experimentally stressed birds developed songs with significantly shorter song motif duration and reduced complexity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Research on speech motor control and its disorders: a review and prospective.

TL;DR: This article reviewed issues in speech motor control and a class of communication disorders known as motor speech disorders, including dysarthrias, apraxia of speech, developmental stuttering, acquired (neurogenic and psychogenic) stuttering and cluttering.
Book ChapterDOI

The evolution of geographic variation in birdsong

TL;DR: The chapter focuses on the evolution of song dialects and emphasizes the functional hypotheses to explain their evolution, and describes the scenarios by which songs may diverge indirectly through selection on components of the vocal apparatus such as body size and beak form and function.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Ecology and evolution of acoustic communication in birds

Donald E. Kroodsma, +1 more
- 01 Jul 1997 - 
TL;DR: In this article, the authors reviewed the contributing ornithologists' current research in birds' acoustic communication with an ecological and evolutionary focus, and also identified the areas they feel will dominate future research efforts.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sexual dimorphism in vocal control areas of the songbird brain

TL;DR: In canaries and zebra finches, three vocal control areas in the brain are strikingly larger in males than in females, believed to be the first report of such gross sexual dimorphism in a vertebrate brain.
Journal ArticleDOI

Temporal Hierarchical Control of Singing in Birds

TL;DR: In zebra finches, songs include notes and syllables (groups of notes) delivered in fixed sequences, and neurons in the forebrain nucleus HVc exhibited reliable changes in activity rates whose patterns were uniquely associated with syllable identity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Birdsong: from behavior to neuron

TL;DR: This review shall examine critically the major current issues and ideas in this field, placing special emphasis on the topics related to the development, learning, and neural control of song.
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