Rose Gary J, Goller Franz, Gritton Howard J, Plamondon Stephanie L, Baugh Alexander T, Cooper Brenton G
Department of Biology, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah 84112-0840, USA.
Nature. 2004 Dec 9;432(7018):753-8. doi: 10.1038/nature02992.
Modern theories of learned vocal behaviours, such as human speech and singing in songbirds, posit that acoustic communication signals are reproduced from memory, using auditory feedback. The nature of these memories, however, is unclear. Here we propose and test a model for how complex song structure can emerge from sparse sequence information acquired during tutoring. In this conceptual model, a population of combination-sensitive (phrase-pair) detectors is shaped by early exposure to song and serves as the minimal representation of the template necessary for generating complete song. As predicted by the model, birds that were tutored with only pairs of normally adjacent song phrases were able to assemble full songs in which phrases were placed in the correct order; birds that were tutored with reverse-ordered phrase pairs sang songs with reversed phrase order. Birds that were tutored with all song phrases, but presented singly, failed to produce normal, full songs. These findings provide the first evidence for a minimal requirement of sequence information in the acoustic model that can give rise to correct song structure.
现代关于习得性发声行为的理论,比如人类语言和鸣禽歌唱,假定声学通讯信号是利用听觉反馈从记忆中再现的。然而,这些记忆的本质尚不清楚。在此,我们提出并测试了一个模型,该模型解释了在学习过程中获取的稀疏序列信息如何产生复杂的歌曲结构。在这个概念模型中,一群对组合敏感(短语对)的探测器通过早期接触歌曲而形成,并作为生成完整歌曲所需模板的最小表征。正如模型所预测的,仅接受正常相邻歌曲短语对训练的鸟类能够组装出短语按正确顺序排列的完整歌曲;接受反向短语对训练的鸟类唱出的歌曲短语顺序颠倒。接受所有歌曲短语但单独呈现训练的鸟类未能唱出正常的完整歌曲。这些发现首次证明了声学模型中序列信息对于产生正确歌曲结构的最低要求。