Hoffmann Lukas A, Saravanan Varun, Wood Alynda N, He Li, Sober Samuel J
Neuroscience Doctoral Program, Department of Biology, and.
Department of Ophthalmology, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia 30322.
J Neurosci. 2016 Feb 17;36(7):2176-89. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3883-15.2016.
Although the brain relies on auditory information to calibrate vocal behavior, the neural substrates of vocal learning remain unclear. Here we demonstrate that lesions of the dopaminergic inputs to a basal ganglia nucleus in a songbird species (Bengalese finches, Lonchura striata var. domestica) greatly reduced the magnitude of vocal learning driven by disruptive auditory feedback in a negative reinforcement task. These lesions produced no measureable effects on the quality of vocal performance or the amount of song produced. Our results suggest that dopaminergic inputs to the basal ganglia selectively mediate reinforcement-driven vocal plasticity. In contrast, dopaminergic lesions produced no measurable effects on the birds' ability to restore song acoustics to baseline following the cessation of reinforcement training, suggesting that different forms of vocal plasticity may use different neural mechanisms.
During skill learning, the brain relies on sensory feedback to improve motor performance. However, the neural basis of sensorimotor learning is poorly understood. Here, we investigate the role of the neurotransmitter dopamine in regulating vocal learning in the Bengalese finch, a songbird with an extremely precise singing behavior that can nevertheless be reshaped dramatically by auditory feedback. Our findings show that reduction of dopamine inputs to a region of the songbird basal ganglia greatly impairs vocal learning but has no detectable effect on vocal performance. These results suggest a specific role for dopamine in regulating vocal plasticity.
尽管大脑依赖听觉信息来校准发声行为,但发声学习的神经基础仍不清楚。在此,我们证明,在一种鸣禽物种( Bengalese 雀, Lonchura striata var. domestica )中,向基底神经节核团的多巴胺能输入受损,在负强化任务中,极大地降低了由破坏性听觉反馈驱动的发声学习幅度。这些损伤对发声表现的质量或产生的鸣叫数量没有可测量的影响。我们的结果表明,向基底神经节的多巴胺能输入选择性地介导强化驱动的发声可塑性。相比之下,多巴胺能损伤对鸟类在强化训练停止后将鸣叫声学恢复到基线的能力没有可测量的影响,这表明不同形式的发声可塑性可能使用不同的神经机制。
在技能学习过程中,大脑依赖感觉反馈来改善运动表现。然而,感觉运动学习的神经基础仍知之甚少。在此,我们研究神经递质多巴胺在调节 Bengalese 雀发声学习中的作用, Bengalese 雀是一种鸣禽,具有极其精确的鸣叫行为,但仍可通过听觉反馈进行显著重塑。我们的研究结果表明,减少鸣禽基底神经节区域的多巴胺输入会极大地损害发声学习,但对发声表现没有可检测到的影响。这些结果表明多巴胺在调节发声可塑性方面具有特定作用。