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Article Dans Une Revue Journal of Physiology - Paris Année : 2013

How social experience shapes song representation in the brain of starlings.

Hugo Cousillas

Résumé

Birdsong, like speech, is a learned behaviour whose critical function is to communicate with others and whose development critically depends on social influences. Song learning is a complex phenomenon that involves not only the development of species-specific vocalisations, but also the development of the ability to organise these vocalisations and to use them in an appropriate context. Although the fact that interactions with adult experienced models are essential for song production to develop properly has been well established, far less is known about song perception and processing. The fact that songbirds learn to vocalise and to use their vocalisations selectively through interactions with adults questions whether such interactions are also required for songbirds to perceive and process their vocalisations selectively and whether social interactions may shape song perception and processing as they shape song production. In order to address these questions, our team uses an original neuroethological approach to study the neural bases of song behaviour in a highly social songbird species: the European starlings. We provide here a synthesis of the results we have obtained using this approach over the last decade. Our results show that direct social experience with adult experienced models not only shapes song behaviour but also shapes these songbirds' brains and their ability to perceive and to process acoustic signals whose communicative value, as well as their acoustic structure, have to be learned.
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Dates et versions

hal-00838671 , version 1 (26-06-2013)

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Isabelle George, Hugo Cousillas. How social experience shapes song representation in the brain of starlings.. Journal of Physiology - Paris, 2013, 107 (3), pp.170-7. ⟨10.1016/j.jphysparis.2012.12.002⟩. ⟨hal-00838671⟩
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