Hahn Allison H, Campbell Kimberley A, Congdon Jenna V, Hoang John, McMillan Neil, Scully Erin N, Yong Joshua J H, Elie Julie E, Sturdy Christopher B
Department of Psychology, University of Alberta, P217 Biological Sciences Building, Edmonton, AB, Canada.
Department of Zoology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, USA.
Anim Cogn. 2017 Jul;20(4):639-654. doi: 10.1007/s10071-017-1087-5. Epub 2017 Apr 9.
Chickadees produce a multi-note chick-a-dee call in multiple socially relevant contexts. One component of this call is the D note, which is a low-frequency and acoustically complex note with a harmonic-like structure. In the current study, we tested black-capped chickadees on a between-category operant discrimination task using vocalizations with acoustic structures similar to black-capped chickadee D notes, but produced by various songbird species, in order to examine the role that phylogenetic distance plays in acoustic perception of vocal signals. We assessed the extent to which discrimination performance was influenced by the phylogenetic relatedness among the species producing the vocalizations and by the phylogenetic relatedness between the subjects' species (black-capped chickadees) and the vocalizers' species. We also conducted a bioacoustic analysis and discriminant function analysis in order to examine the acoustic similarities among the discrimination stimuli. A previous study has shown that neural activation in black-capped chickadee auditory and perceptual brain regions is similar following the presentation of these vocalization categories. However, we found that chickadees had difficulty discriminating between forward and reversed black-capped chickadee D notes, a result that directly corresponded to the bioacoustic analysis indicating that these stimulus categories were acoustically similar. In addition, our results suggest that the discrimination between vocalizations produced by two parid species (chestnut-backed chickadees and tufted titmice) is perceptually difficult for black-capped chickadees, a finding that is likely in part because these vocalizations contain acoustic similarities. Overall, our results provide evidence that black-capped chickadees' perceptual abilities are influenced by both phylogenetic relatedness and acoustic structure.
山雀在多种与社交相关的情境中会发出多音节的“chick-a-dee”叫声。这种叫声的一个组成部分是D音,它是一个低频且声学结构复杂、具有类似和声结构的音符。在当前的研究中,我们使用了由各种鸣禽物种发出的、具有与黑顶山雀D音相似声学结构的发声,对黑顶山雀进行了类别间操作性辨别任务测试,以检验系统发育距离在对声音信号的声学感知中所起的作用。我们评估了辨别表现受发出叫声的物种之间的系统发育相关性以及受实验对象物种(黑顶山雀)与发声者物种之间的系统发育相关性影响的程度。我们还进行了生物声学分析和判别函数分析,以检验辨别刺激之间的声学相似性。之前的一项研究表明,在呈现这些发声类别后,黑顶山雀听觉和感知脑区的神经激活是相似的。然而,我们发现山雀难以区分正向和反向的黑顶山雀D音,这一结果与生物声学分析直接相符,该分析表明这些刺激类别在声学上是相似的。此外,我们的结果表明,对于黑顶山雀来说,辨别由两种山雀科物种(栗背山雀和簇山雀)发出的叫声在感知上是困难的,这一发现可能部分是因为这些叫声在声学上存在相似性。总体而言,我们的结果提供了证据,表明黑顶山雀的感知能力受到系统发育相关性和声学结构的影响。