Doupe Allison J, Solis Michele M, Kimpo Rhea, Boettiger Charlotte A
Keck Center for Integrative Neuroscience, and Department of Physiology, Box 0444, HSE 802, University of California, San Francisco, California 94143, USA.
Ann N Y Acad Sci. 2004 Jun;1016:495-523. doi: 10.1196/annals.1298.035.
Songbirds, much like humans, learn their vocal behavior, and must be able to hear both themselves and others to do so. Studies of the brain areas involved in singing and song learning could reveal the underlying neural mechanisms. Here we describe experiments that explore the properties of the songbird anterior forebrain pathway (AFP), a basal ganglia-forebrain circuit known to be critical for song learning and for adult modification of vocal output. First, neural recordings in anesthetized, juvenile birds show that auditory AFP neurons become selectively responsive to the song stimuli that are compared during sensorimotor learning. Individual AFP neurons develop tuning to the bird's own song (BOS), and in many cases to the tutor song as well, even when these stimuli are manipulated to be very different from each other. Such dual selectivity could be useful in the BOS-tutor song comparison critical to song learning. Second, simultaneous neural recordings from the AFP and its target nucleus in the song motor pathway in anesthetized adult birds reveal correlated activity that is preserved through multiple steps of the circuits for song, including the AFP. This suggests that the AFP contains highly functionally interconnected neurons, an architecture that can preserve information about the timing of firing of groups of neurons. Finally, in vitro studies show that recurrent synapses between neurons in the AFP outflow nucleus, which are expected to contribute importantly to AFP correlation, can undergo activity-dependent and timing-sensitive strengthening. This synaptic enhancement appears to be restricted to birds in the sensory critical and early sensorimotor phases of learning. Together, these studies show that the AFP contains cells that reflect learning of both BOS and tutor song, as well as developmentally regulated synaptic and circuit mechanisms well-suited to create temporally organized assemblies of such cells. Such experience-dependent sensorimotor assemblies are likely to be critical to the AFP's role in song learning. Moreover, studies of such mechanisms in this basal ganglia circuit specialized for song may shed light more generally on how basal ganglia circuits function in guiding motor learning using sensory feedback signals.
鸣禽和人类非常相似,它们学习发声行为,并且必须能够听到自己和其他同类的声音才能做到这一点。对参与歌唱和歌曲学习的脑区进行研究,可能会揭示其潜在的神经机制。在此,我们描述了一些实验,这些实验探究了鸣禽前脑前通路(AFP)的特性,AFP是一种基底神经节-前脑回路,已知对歌曲学习和成年期发声输出的调整至关重要。首先,对麻醉的幼鸟进行神经记录表明,听觉AFP神经元会对在感觉运动学习过程中进行比较的歌曲刺激产生选择性反应。单个AFP神经元会形成对鸟类自身歌声(BOS)的调谐,并且在许多情况下,即使这些刺激被操纵得彼此非常不同,也会对导师的歌声产生调谐。这种双重选择性可能在对歌曲学习至关重要的BOS与导师歌声的比较中发挥作用。其次,对麻醉的成年鸟类的AFP及其在歌曲运动通路中的靶核进行同步神经记录,揭示了相关活动,这种活动在包括AFP在内的歌曲回路的多个步骤中得以保留。这表明AFP包含功能高度互联的神经元,这种结构能够保留有关神经元群放电时间的信息。最后,体外研究表明,AFP流出核中神经元之间的递归突触,预计对AFP相关性有重要贡献,能够经历依赖活动和时间敏感的增强。这种突触增强似乎仅限于处于学习的感觉关键期和早期感觉运动期的鸟类。这些研究共同表明,AFP包含反映BOS和导师歌声学习的细胞,以及发育调节的突触和回路机制,这些机制非常适合创建此类细胞的时间组织集合。这种依赖经验的感觉运动集合可能对AFP在歌曲学习中的作用至关重要。此外,对这个专门用于歌曲的基底神经节回路中的此类机制进行研究,可能会更广泛地揭示基底神经节回路如何利用感觉反馈信号来指导运动学习。