The Journal of Neuroscience, July 30, 2003, 23(17):6928-6935
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Long Memory in Song Learning by Zebra Finches
Yasuko Funabiki and
Masakazu Konishi
Division of Biology, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena,
California 91125
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Abstract
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Young songbirds use memorized tutor songs as templates to shape their own
songs. This process requires control of voice by auditory feedback. We
prevented zebra finches from hearing their own vocalizations by exposure to
loud noise after 35 d of age, before which they had been reared with song
tutors from birth. When the noise stopped at 102-200 d of age, the birds sang
unstable and noisy song syllables that did not resemble the tutor syllables.
The similarity to the tutor syllables steadily increased until the time of
song crystallization
30 d later. These findings show that the memory of
tutor syllables survives auditory perturbations during the period when it is
normally recalled and that zebra finches can use the memory well after the
normal period of song development. The temporal order of syllables resembled
the tutor model only in birds released from the noise before 80 d of age but
not in older birds. Thus, different schedules and processes may govern the
learning of syllable phonology and syntax.
Key words: zebra finch; memory; learning; auditory feedback; sensory phase; sensorimotor phase
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Introduction
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Many animals use complex sounds for communication, but few of them must
learn to produce them. Humans and songbirds belong to the small group of
animals that learn vocal signals. A birdsong consists of sound components such
as notes and syllables and silent intervals between them. Song develops
gradually through variable vocalizations toward a stable or crystallized form.
Young birds memorize songs before they are old enough to sing, because their
song tutors, like their fathers, cease to sing after the breeding season.
Birds that are isolated after having heard a tutor song can reproduce it later
without hearing it again (Marler and Peters,
1981
,
1982
). Thus, song learning
consists of two stages, memorization or sensory phase and reproduction or
sensorimotor phase. Birds use the memorized tutor song as a template to shape
their vocal output, because they cannot reproduce the song if they become deaf
before the onset of singing (Konishi,
1965
). The sensory phase has been extensively studied in species
in which the two phases do not overlap, such as white-crowned sparrows and
song sparrows (Marler and Tamura,
1964
; Marler,
1970
; Marler and Peters,
1987
). These studies clearly showed that young songbirds could
reproduce the tutor song long after hearing it only during the sensory phase.
These findings led to the notion of long memory in song learning
(Marler and Peters, 1982
).
These studies periodically monitored vocalizations to see whether and when the
birds began to reproduce any part of the tutor song. The possibility of
comparing voice with the song memory arises as soon as birds begin to
vocalize. This process can occur well before we can detect any signs of song
imitation (Tchernichovski et al.,
2001
). It may be that birds begin to use the song memory early and
continue to do so until song is crystallized. The term "long
memory" would not be appropriate for such a process. Thus, a rigorous
proof for long memory requires control of access to the song memory during
vocal development.
The question is how to control the bird's use of song memory during the
period of testing. The techniques include reversible blocking of either
hearing or singing to break the vocal-auditory feedback loop
(Nottebohm, 1969
;
Pytte and Suthers, 2000
). We
prevented young zebra finches from hearing their own voice by exposing them to
continuous masking noise during and beyond the normal period of the
sensorimotor phase. After we stopped the noise at 102-200 d of age, the birds
gradually developed song syllables that resembled the tutor syllables. Thus,
zebra finches can retain and recall the memory of individual tutor syllables
well beyond the age at which song learning normally subsides. In contrast, the
birds exposed to noise beyond 80 d of age failed to reproduce the syllable
sequences of their tutors. Thus, different schedules and processes may govern
the learning of syllable phonology and syntax.
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Materials and Methods
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Animals. Two pairs of adult Bengalese finches and five pairs of
adult zebra finches were obtained from our breeding colony. Each breeding pair
was housed in a sound attenuated chamber. Eggs of Bengalese finches were
exchanged for those of zebra finches. We used the Bengalese finches as tutors
for young zebra finches, because we wanted to discriminate between learned and
unlearned components in the songs of the pupils. Young zebra finches might
innately produce syllable phonology and syntax that resemble those of their
conspecific tutors. Bengalese tutors can reduce this ambiguity, because their
syllable syntax and some of their syllable types do not occur in the song of
zebra finches. Thus, if zebra finch pupils sing songs containing these
features, they must have copied them from their foster fathers.
All young birds were raised either with their biological parents or with
foster parents until 35 d of age. Male nestlings of both experimental and
control groups were removed and isolated in individual sound attenuated
chambers. Thereafter, the control birds (n = 9) were kept in quiet
chambers, whereas the experimental birds (n = 21) were exposed to
noise. Of these, 14 Exp-birds were used to study the effects of long periods
(102-200 d) of noise exposure on both syllable phonology and syntax (compare
Fig. 4a) and seven
Exp2-birds were used to test the effects of shorter periods (53-90 d) of noise
exposure on the development of syllable syntax
(Table 1).

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Figure 4. Time course of changes in similarity in syllable structure. a, All
the birds in both control and experimental groups were reared by their
biological (zebra finch) or foster (Bengalese finch) parents until 35 d of
age. Then, the control birds were individually isolated to develop their song
from memory. The Exp-birds were exposed to continuous broadband noise in
individual sound isolation boxes between 35 and 129 ± 27 d of age.
After their release from the noise, all of these birds developed syllables
resembling the tutor model. Open symbols show the similarity score at each
sampling day in the controls, and closed symbols show that in the Exp-birds.
The same symbols and lines are used for multiple pupils raised by the same
tutor, including two Bengalese and five zebra finch tutors. b,
Summary of similarities in syllables. This figure plots the means and SDs of
the curves in a to show the general trends. Although the Exp-birds
had a lower mean similarity at the time of song crystallization than the
controls, the similarity increased at almost the same rate as in the
controls.
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Auditory perturbation. The aim of this work required methods to
prevent the birds from using the memory of tutor songs during a particular
period. Thus, control of either hearing or vocalization would achieve this
purpose. An ideal method for reversible control of auditory feedback would be
electronic (Leonardo and Konishi,
1999
). This technique is unsuitable for an early phase of song
development, because the song is both too soft and variable to determine the
moment when delayed feedback starts. We exposed all experimental birds to
sustained noise, 110 dB (A) sound pressure level (SPL), day and night. [(A)
refers to a filter setting in sound measurement; dB (A) means that this filter
setting was used to obtain dB values.] We chose this sound level to avoid
permanent damage to the inner ear hair cells. Avian hair cells regenerate
after destruction by loud noise or drugs
(Corwin and Cotanche, 1988
;
Ryals and Rubel, 1988
;
Woolley and Rubel, 1999
).
However, it is not known whether they regenerate more than once. We measured
the sound pressure levels of this noise with a Brüel and Kjaer 1 inch
microphone in conjunction with a Brüel and Kjaer microphone amplifier.
This noise level not only raised threshold but also assured a relatively fast
and complete recovery of auditory sensitivity after the cessation of noise
(Fig. 1).

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Figure 1. Changes in hearing thresholds after release from noise. Hearing thresholds
of Exp-birds (n = 14) to pure tones (0.5, 1, 2, 4, and 8 kHz) were
measured behaviorally and compared with those in control birds (n =
9). Plotted (symbols and bars) are the means and SDs. Symbols are explained in
the inset. A2, 2 d after release from noise. The speed of recovery was
different for different frequencies: the mean threshold for 1 kHz was
different from that of the controls on the day of release from the noise but
no longer so 2 d after release, whereas the mean thresholds for 2 and 4 kHz
took 4 d to become indistinguishable from those of the controls.
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We measured the auditory thresholds of nine control birds and 14 Exp-birds
(Fig. 1). The methods of
measurement had to be simple and fast for the Exp-birds, because repeated
exposure to test tones might affect song development. We observed each bird in
a dark sound attenuated chamber with a night vision device. The test signals
were tones of 0.5, 1, 2, 4, and 8 kHz. Sound pressure levels varied from 10 dB
SPL to 100 dB SPL in 5 dB steps. The hearing threshold is the lowest sound
level to which the bird responded. The reactions to these signals were sudden
movements or calls or both. These methods are reliable, because the audibility
curve for the control birds is very similar to those obtained by other
techniques (Ryals et al.,
1999
).
Song recording. We recorded songs in two sound attenuated chambers
using Optimus 33-3022 microphones (Radioshack, Fort Worth, TX). We used a
software-based sound level detector to enable a computer to start recording
vocal activities (Leonardo and Konishi,
1999
). Sounds were filtered (20 kHz cutoff), sampled at 40 kHz,
and recorded directly onto the hard disc. Vocalizations of the control birds
were recorded almost every day from before 35 d of age until the beginning of
singing and less frequently afterward. Monitoring of several Exp-birds at day
35, just before the noise exposure began, did not indicate any singing. The
songs of experimental birds were not recorded during noise exposure, because
even a short period of hearing their own vocalizations could defeat the
purpose of the study. However, a small surveillance camera placed close to the
bird's cage within the sound chamber recorded the bodily postures and beak
movements associated with singing. Furthermore, we removed experimental birds
for song recording after different durations of noise exposure. These birds
always began to sing shortly after they were transferred to the recording
chambers, indicating that they had been singing during noise exposure (compare
Fig. 2). Other behaviors of
these birds such as vigorous bathing, preening, and rapid flying maneuvers
indicated that the noise did not distress them. Recordings were made
frequently after release from the noise and during the period of change in
song and less frequently as song crystallized.

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Figure 2. Songs recorded shortly after release from noise. Birds heard tutor songs
until 35 d of age and were exposed to noise for different durations. Songs
recorded within 3 d after release from noise consisted of syllables and silent
intervals spaced more or less regularly. The syllables were noisy and lacked
most of the elaborate sound patterns contained in the tutor songs. These
abnormalities appeared regardless of the age of release from noise: 75 d for
Green 18, 106 d for Purple 20, 109 d for Gold 1, and 122 d for Black 1.
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Analysis of phonology. We used Sound Analysis 2.08
(Tchernichovski et al., 2000
)
to quantify the similarity of phonology between tutors and pupils. The default
setting of Sound Analysis is adjusted for the song of zebra finches at the
Rockefeller University. The song of Bengalese finches required a different
setting. However, we used the same setting for the controls and experimental
birds that heard the same tutor. The analyzed recordings (song files) were
1000 msec in duration for tutors and 3000 msec for pupils. We adjusted these
durations according to the positions of syllables in the sample. The longer
sample from pupils helped reduce variability in overall similarity scores. We
obtained mean similarity scores for 10 randomly selected song files per bird
per sampling day. We recorded at least 50 song files from each tutor.
Analysis of syllable order. We randomly selected from each bird 50
songs containing 1500-2000 syllables. We used Sound Analysis 2.08 to match
each tutor syllable to a pupil syllable. Analysis of syllable syntax required
methods that are not available in Sound Analysis. We calculated the transition
probability of every pair of syllables and compared the distributions of
probabilities between the tutor and pupil syllable sequences as shown in
Table 2. Here, a and b are
syllables and aabbaabba and abababab indicate syllable orders. In
Table 2, a and b in the left
column are leading syllables and those in the top row are following syllables.
The numerator in each cell is the number of transitions from one syllable to
another, and the denominator is the total number of transitions from each
leading syllable. The sum of probability for each row is 1. We compared the
two contingency tables to see the degree of overlap between the two sequences.
Thus, because a to b transition probability is 2/4 in the tutor and 4/4 in the
pupil, the overlap is 2/4. Because the probability from b to a is 2/4 for the
tutor and 3/3 for the pupil, the overlap is also 2/4. We used the relative
frequencies of different syllables in the pupil's song to weigh the overlaps
such as 2/4 x 4/(4 + 4) + 2/4 x 4/(4 + 4) = 1/2, which is the
measure of similarity for the above tutor-pupil pair. This procedure makes the
sum of weighted overlaps 1, when the tutor and pupil sequences are identical.
Each tutor syllable matches a pupil syllable in the above example. This method
does not, however, ignore unmatched syllables. These obviously reduce the
degree of similarity.
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Results
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It is well known that some features of species-specific songs appear in
both deaf birds and birds raised in isolation
(Konishi, 1964
;
Price, 1979
;
Marler and Sherman, 1985
).
Because this ability can confound the study of song learning, we used
Bengalese finches as song tutors for the zebra finches that we used for
comparison of both syllable phonology and syntax. The song of Bengalese
finches contains syllable types that seldom occur in the song of zebra
finches. Therefore, the Bengalese-like features in the syllables of
foster-reared zebra finches are because of learning. In a separate group, we
used young birds' own fathers as song tutors for comparison. Both the control
and experimental birds had spent the first 35 d from birth with their own
parents or with Bengalese foster parents and were transferred to individual
sound attenuated boxes at 35 d of age. We chose this age because young zebra
finches are known to memorize tutor songs by this age
(Immelmann, 1969
;
Böhner, 1990
;
Jones et al., 1996
). All
Exp-birds were exposed to continuous broadband noise of 110 dB (A) SPL from 35
d of age to a mean age of 129 d (range, 102-200 d). The sensorimotor phase of
song learning normally occurs between 40 and 80 d of age, and song
crystallizes by 90 d (Zann,
1996
). Therefore, the period of noise exposure covered more than
the normal period of song learning in this species.
Effects of noise on auditory threshold
We used behavioral methods to measure the hearing sensitivity of both
control and Exp-birds. Shortly after release from the noise, the Exp-birds had
higher hearing thresholds than the controls for all frequencies tested
(compare Fig. 1). The auditory
thresholds of the Exp-birds recovered with time. The speed of recovery was
different for different frequencies: the mean threshold for 1 kHz was
different from that of the controls on the day of release from the noise
(p < 0.005) but no longer different 2 d after release (p
< 0.240; t test), whereas the mean thresholds for 2 and 4 kHz were
still different from those of the controls 2 d after release (p <
0.039 for 2 kHz and p < 0.015 for 4 kHz; t test) but
indistinguishable from the controls after 4 d (p < 0.68 for 2 kHz
and p < 0.07 for 4 kHz; t test).
Reproduction of tutor syllables from memory
We will first describe the ability of the Exp-birds to reproduce tutor
syllables after varying periods of noise exposure. Their syllables, as
recorded soon after release from the noise, were unstable, noisy, and highly
abnormal in general (Fig. 2).
The syllables of all Exp-birds contained these abnormalities regardless of the
age at which they were released from the noise. Syllables with more distinct
structures emerged in songs recorded at later dates
(Fig. 3c,d). We
quantified the similarities in syllable phonology between tutors and their
pupils using Sound Analysis 2.08
(Tchernichovski et al., 2000
).
Figure 4a shows the
results from all birds; here, each curve shows changes in the mean similarity
score of a bird as a function of days from the time of either the separation
from the tutor (for controls) or release from the noise (for Exp-birds). The
mean similarity scores of all control birds reached a plateau in
30 d
after the separation from their tutors at 35 d of age. Different Exp-birds
were released from the noise at different times. Nevertheless, their mean
similarity scores increased almost as fast as those of the control birds. Note
that the mean similarity score of an individual bird seldom goes below 10-20%
or exceeds 70% in zebra finches. One hundred percent is unattainable because
of individual differences in song that inevitably develop. In contrast, 0% is
unattainable, because similarities can occur in unlearned components of
syllables.

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Figure 3. Gradual emergence of memorized tutor syllable structures. Unstable and
noisy syllables became more stable and acquired distinct forms with time after
release from noise. a, Bengalese tutor song. b, Noisy song
of a zebra finch pupil sung 2 d after release (A2), the mean similarity score
(%) seldom becomes 0 because of resemblances by chance. c, Song of
the same bird 7 d after release (A7). d, Thirty-eight days after
release. Note how the mean similarity increases with time. e, Song of
a zebra finch pupil that heard the same Bengalese tutor, but not exposed to
noise. f, Song of a zebra finch for comparison.
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To compare the Exp-birds with the control birds as groups, we plotted the
mean of mean similarity scores for each group as a function of days after
either 35 d of age for the control birds or the day of release from the noise
for the Exp-birds (Fig.
4b). We compared mean similarity scores between the
control birds and Exp-birds that were raised by the same tutor to exclude the
possible effects of differences in tutor songs on similarity scores. In both
groups, song crystallized and the similarity to the tutor syllables reached a
plateau in
1 month. At the plateau level, the Exp-birds' syllables
resembled their foster fathers with a mean similarity score of 60.3 ±
3.2% (at 60 d after release from noise), whereas the syllables of the controls
resembled those of the same fathers with a mean similarity score of 67.2
± 3.5% (at 95 d of age). However, this difference between the two
groups is statistically not significant (t test; t = 1.402;
p = 0.183).
Development of overall temporal pattern of song during noise
exposure
The songs of both zebra and Bengalese finches are composed of syllables of
certain durations and silent intervals between them. This overall temporal
pattern was already evident in the songs that the Exp-birds sang shortly after
release from the noise (Fig.
2). We randomly selected 20 syllables and inter-syllable intervals
from six Exp-birds raised by Bengalese 1 and 2 tutors. The mean and SD of
syllable durations and silent intervals of the Bengalese tutors were 75.3
± 23.1 msec and 37.8 ± 16.7 msec, respectively. The mean and SD
of syllable durations and silent intervals of the six Exp-birds recorded
shortly after release from the noise were 79.0 ± 30.5 msec and 99.7
± 55.1 msec, respectively. The mean and SD of syllable durations and
silent intervals of the six Exp-birds after song crystallization were 78.1
± 36.1 msec and 36.5 ± 21.0 msec, respectively. The mean
syllable duration did not differ between the tutors and pupils at any time
(p = 0.482 for shortly after release and p = 0.641 after
song crystallization; t tests). However, shortly after release from
the noise, the mean silent interval of the six Exp-birds was longer than that
of the tutors (p < 0.0001; t test). After song
crystallization, there was no difference in the mean silent interval
(p = 0.738; t test). Mann-Whitney U tests of
individual pupils with their tutors were consistent with the results of the
t tests.
Effects of noise exposure on the development of syllable
sequences
The Exp-birds did not reproduce the order of syllables in the tutor song
(Fig. 5). For the quantitative
analysis below, we compared the same control birds and Exp-birds that we used
for the analysis of phonology. These Exp-birds were released from the noise
after 100 d of age. We calculated for each syllable the probabilities of each
other syllable following and compared the distributions of probabilities
between the tutor and pupil songs. When the tutor and pupil distributions
matched perfectly, we assigned a similarity score of 1. The overlap between
the tutors and the Exp-birds was only 0.25 ± 0.10 compared with 0.67
± 0.16 between the same tutors and the controls
(Fig. 6a). These
differences were statistically significant (t = 6.89; p <
0.0001). The value 0.25 ± 0.10 is near random, because one would expect
an overlap of 0.24 ± 0.05 if the pupil ordered syllables at random. We
also tested whether the Exp-birds reared by their own parents might be able to
copy the syntax better than those raised by Bengalese foster parents. Their
performance was no better than those raised by Bengalese finches (i.e.,
controls, 0.59 ± 0.13; Exp-birds, 0.21 ± 0.15).

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Figure 5. Learning of syllable sequences. a, Song of Bengalese 1, which
tutored all the birds in this figure until 35 d of age. b, The
control bird closely copied not only the tutor's syllables but also their
sequences. c, This zebra finch also reproduced the tutor syntax quite
well after exposure to noise from 35 to 75 d of age. d, Noise
exposure from 35 to 112 d of age decreased this bird's ability to reproduce
the tutor syntax, although the bird did copy syllable phonology quite well.
Letters above syllables (such as a, b, c) indicate the pupils' copies of the
tutor's syllables A, B, C, respectively. The pupils' syllables that do not
resemble any of the tutor's syllables are indicated by other letters, such as
u. The numbers, such as 0.276, indicate the degree of similarity to the tutor
syntax, 1.0 being perfect copying.
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Figure 6. Inability of experimental birds to reproduce tutor syllable sequences.
a, The mean similarity score of the Exp-birds was significantly lower
than that of controls and similar to the random level (p = 0.9474).
Dashed line indicates random level. b, The rate of syllable
repetitions was different between the controls and Exp-birds. c,
Removal of repeated syllables reduces the syntactical differences. Circles are
means, and error bars are SDs. d, Similarity to tutor syntax declines
sharply when birds were released from noise after 80 d of age. All 14 birds
shown in d were raised by the same foster parent (Bengalese 1). Open
circles, Control birds; filled circles, Exp-birds; crosses, Exp2-birds.
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We used another criterion to determine the influence of the tutor syntax on
the pupil's song. The presence or absence of syllable repetitions
distinguishes the song of Bengalese finches from that of zebra finches
(compare Fig. 5). If zebra
finches raised by a Bengalese pair repeat syllables, the pupils have probably
derived this trait from the tutor model. The Exp-birds developed and
maintained a fixed sequence of syllables that resembled the species-specific
syntax of zebra finches (such as abc) more than the Bengalese syntax (such as
aaabbbccc), whereas the control birds repeated the syllables like their foster
father. We measured, therefore, the rate of syllable repetitions in the songs
of foster-reared controls and Exp-birds. The Exp-birds repeated the syllables
much less frequently than the controls
(Fig. 6b). Removal of
repetitive segments of the song reduced the syntactical difference between the
two, although the difference was still significant (p = 0.014)
(Fig. 6c).
Having found the effects of noise exposure on the syllable syntax, we used
an additional group of birds (Exp2-birds) to test whether the duration of
noise exposure affects the retention of syllable sequences. The Exp2-birds
(n = 7) were raised with tutors until 35 d of age and then exposed to
noise. Five birds that were removed from the noise before 80 d of age
reproduced the correct syllable orders of their Bengalese foster fathers
(Fig. 6d). In
contrast, two birds that were removed from the noise at or after 80 d of age
failed to reproduce the tutor syntax.
 |
Discussion
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Animals, young and old, must memorize certain biologically important
signals during some phase of their lives. Learning may occur once during an
animal's lifetime, as in young salmon remembering the smell of their
birthplace, or during every breeding season, as in ewes and their lambs
remembering the smell of each other
(Keverne, 1995
). When the time
of learning is restricted, it is called a critical period. In birdsong
research, it is now generally agreed that the temporal boundaries of learning
are not as critical as the name implies. Zebra finches that were raised in
isolation could both memorize and reproduce a small number of tutor syllables
after the normal age of song crystallization, which is
90 d
(Eales, 1985
;
Morrison and Nottebohm, 1993
;
Jones et al., 1996
).
Furthermore, recent studies show that adult zebra and Bengalese finches retain
the ability to modify song under experimental conditions. Adult birds may lose
control of song in response to perturbation of auditory feedback or deafening.
Such birds gradually recover the original song and even learn a new song after
normal auditory feedback is restored
(Leonardo and Konishi, 1999
;
Woolley and Rubel, 2002
). The
ability to restore the original song indicates that the birds remember it.
This memory may also work like the template mentioned earlier. What is not
known is the extent to which the previous experience of singing contributes to
the restoration of the original song. Deafening caused much less deterioration
to the song of 2- to 5-year-old zebra finches than to that of younger adults
(Lombardino and Nottebohm,
2000
). To our knowledge, no study has tested the storage of song
memories while the vocal-auditory feedback loop was open.
The main aim of our work was to study the retention of song memories before
vocal-auditory interactions occur by reversibly eliminating auditory feedback
well before the birds started to sing. Thus, our work focused on the fate of
the memory of a tutor song as it was formed during the sensory phase of song
learning. Although restricted learning in our paradigm tells little, what the
birds copied shows not only how long song memory remained but also how long
the motor side of the song control system retained its plasticity. The
syllables of the Exp-birds shortly after release from the noise lacked most of
the fine features of the tutor syllables regardless of their age. However, the
temporal pattern of these songs consisted of syllables of normal durations,
although the silent intervals between them were much longer than those of the
tutors. These songs were strikingly similar to those that zebra finches
deafened in early ages produced in adulthood [Price
(1979
), his
Fig. 4]. The syllables in
Price's birds were noisy, but their mean duration (90 ± 60 msec) was
like that of normal adult zebra finches (90 ± 50 msec), and their mean
silent intervals (70 ± 20 msec) were much longer than that of normal
adult zebra finches (40 ± 20 msec). Our Exp-birds also had syllables of
normal durations and abnormally long silent intervals shortly after release
from the noise. One of his birds was deafened at 17 d of age. This bird could
have not retained this temporal pattern from previous singing and hearing
experience, because it became deaf before it could sing. Zebra finches cannot
sing before the axonal connections from HVC to the robust nucleus of the
anterior neostriatum are established between 25 and 30 d of age
(Akutagawa and Konishi, 1994
).
Thus, as Price (1979
) pointed
out, central pattern generators produced the overall temporal pattern of song
in his deaf birds. The noisy syllables and long silent intervals of his deaf
birds and our Exp-birds were attributable to the lack of control by auditory
feedback. The subsequent development of syllables and silent intervals
resembling the tutor models shows that zebra finches can retain beyond the
normal age of song learning not only the memory of tutor syllables and their
temporal spacing but also the ability to shape vocal output according to the
memory.
What and where are the neural bases for plasticity in song learning? The
song nuclei of zebra finches undergo both structural and physiological changes
during the normal periods of both sensory and sensorimotor phases
(Nordeen and Nordeen, 1988
;
Herrmann and Arnold, 1991
;
Aamodt et al., 1992
;
Akutagawa and Konishi, 1994
;
Livingston and Mooney, 1997
;
Harding et al., 1998
;
Kittelberger and Mooney,
1999
). Some of these changes occur later than normal in birds
raised in isolation (Wallhausser-Franke et
al., 1995
). If these changes are crucial for the timing of the
sensorimotor phase, the inability to crystallize song during noise exposure
might have delayed the changes. In this case, experience but not age changes
the timing of neural transformation. It is also possible that these changes do
not underlie the timing of song learning
(Aamodt et al., 1995
). Lesions
of the lateral magnocellular nucleus of the anterior neostriatum (LMAN)
disrupt the reproduction of tutor songs in young zebra fiches but not the
maintenance of adult song. This discovery led to the view that the anterior
forebrain pathway including LMAN mediates auditory feedback during the
reproduction of tutor songs (Bottjer et
al., 1984
). However, recent studies show that lesions of LMAN in
adult zebra fiches prevent the deterioration of song by artificial means such
as deafening (Williams and Mehta,
1999
; Brainard and Doupe,
2000a
,b
).
LMAN is, therefore, actively involved in the maintenance of vocal plasticity
in adulthood. The ability of the Exp-birds to develop a new vocal pattern at
102-200 d of age is consistent with this interpretation.
The most striking difference between the Exp-birds and the controls was the
inability of the former to reproduce the tutor syntax. This inability was not
because of species differences in tutor songs, for the Exp-birds that learned
the songs of their own zebra finch fathers also could not reproduce the tutor
syntax. Immelmann (1969
) wrote
that young zebra finches learned the phonology of syllables before their
sequences. Also, the phonology of tutor syllables appears before the syntax
during song development (Tchernichovski et
al., 2001
). Our control birds that were isolated from their tutors
at 35 d of age reproduced both syllable phonology and syntax. The Exp-birds
and their matched controls heard the same tutor song from birth to 35 d of
age. Furthermore, the Exp2-birds that were released from noise before the age
of 80 d reproduced the tutor syntax. We assume, therefore, that the Exp-birds
had learned the tutor syntax before they were isolated. Many possible causes
exist for the inability to reproduce the tutor syntax. The memory of longer
signals may be harder to retain or recall. In humans, this difficulty is
referred to as "the word length effects." Shorter spoken words are
easier to remember than longer ones
(Baddeley et al., 1975
;
Naveh-Benjamin and Ayres,
1986
).
The effects of noise exposure may not be on memory storage or recall but on
the plasticity of the song motor control system. Pytte and Suthers
(2000
) reported that paralysis
of the syringeal muscles by botulinum toxin permanently disabled zebra finches
to reproduce tutor syllables only when the drug was injected during the final
phase of song crystallization. At other times, the birds could compensate for
vocal abnormalities after the drug effects waned. The authors suggested a
sensitive period in the organization of the song motor control system. This
period (80-90 d of age) almost corresponds to the time when the ability to
reproduce the tutor syntax declines. However, in both the paralysis and noise
experiments, it is unclear whether the sensitive period depends on age or
other factors such as the stage of song development in the paralysis
experiment and the duration of noise exposure in the present work.
Behavioral and neurological studies suggest that different neural networks
within the song system may control syllable phonology and syntax
(Vu et al., 1994
;
Yu and Margoliash, 1996
;
Hahnloser et al., 2002
). Both
isolation and genetic experiments show the species specificity of syntax in
birdsongs (Marler and Sherman,
1985
; Güttinger,
1979
). Lesions of song nucleus UVA (nucleus uvaeformis) affected
the syllable syntax without altering the phonology in zebra finches
(Williams and Vicario, 1993
).
In the Bengalese finch, bilateral lesions of the interfacial nucleus, which
receives input from UVA, altered only the syllable syntax
(Hosino and Okanoya, 2000
).
Perturbation of auditory feedback in adult zebra finches also seems to affect
the syntax more than the phonology
(Leonardo and Konishi, 1999
).
Thus, the inability to control vocal output by auditory feedback during song
development may have different effects on the operation of neural networks for
phonology and syntax.
In conclusion, zebra finches do have a long-term memory in song learning.
The memory of tutor syllable phonology survived long periods of auditory
perturbation and remained available for feedback control of song development.
The results also show that the sensorimotor phase of song learning can occur
at ages that are well beyond the normal period. Masking of auditory feedback
differentially affected the reproduction of tutor syllable phonology and
syntax, when the perturbation continued beyond 80 d of age.
 |
Footnotes
|
|---|
Received Feb. 6, 2003;
revised Jun. 4, 2003;
accepted Jun. 4, 2003.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grant NH55984. We
thank Ofer Tchernichovski for help with sound analysis, Allison Doupe and
Teresa Nick for critically reviewing previous drafts of this manuscript, and
Anthony Leonardo and Kazuo Funabiki for help with the hardware and software
used in the present project.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Masakazu Konishi, Division of
Biology 216-76, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA 91125.
E-mail:
konishim{at}its.caltech.edu.
Copyright © 2003 Society for Neuroscience
0270-6474/03/236928-08$15.00/0
 |
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