Behavioural Biology, Institute of Biology Leiden, Leiden University, Leiden, The Netherlands.
Amsterdam Brain and Cognition, Institute for Logic Language and Computation, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Anim Cogn. 2023 Jul;26(4):1161-1175. doi: 10.1007/s10071-023-01763-4. Epub 2023 Mar 19.
Zebra finches rely mainly on syllable phonology rather than on syllable sequence when they discriminate between two songs. However, they can also learn to discriminate two strings containing the same set of syllables by their sequence. How learning about the phonological characteristics of syllables and their sequence relate to each other and to the composition of the stimuli is still an open question. We compared whether and how the zebra finches' relative sensitivity for syllable phonology and syllable sequence depends on the differences between syllable strings. Two groups of zebra finches were trained in a Go-Left/Go-Right task to discriminate either between two strings in which each string contained a unique set of song syllables ('Different-syllables group') or two strings in which both strings contained the same set of syllables, but in a different sequential order ('Same-syllables group'). We assessed to what extent the birds in the two experimental groups attend to the spectral characteristics and the sequence of the syllables by measuring the responses to test strings consisting of spectral modifications or sequence changes. Our results showed no difference in the number of trials needed to discriminate strings consisting of either different or identical sets of syllables. Both experimental groups attended to changes in spectral features in a similar way, but the group for which both training strings consisted of the same set of syllables responded more strongly to changes in sequence than the group for which the training strings consisted of different sets of syllables. This outcome suggests the presence of an additional learning process to learn about syllable sequence when learning about syllable phonology is not sufficient to discriminate two strings. Our study thus demonstrates that the relative importance of syllable phonology and sequence depends on how these features vary among stimuli. This indicates cognitive flexibility in the acoustic features that songbirds might use in their song recognition.
斑马雀主要依赖音节音系而非音节序列来区分两种鸣叫声。然而,它们也可以通过序列来学习区分包含相同音节集的两个字符串。音节的音系特征及其序列如何相互关联以及与刺激的组成如何相关,这仍然是一个悬而未决的问题。我们比较了斑马雀对音节音系和音节序列的相对敏感性是否以及如何取决于音节字符串之间的差异。两组斑马雀在 Go-Left/Go-Right 任务中接受训练,以区分两种字符串,一种字符串包含独特的歌曲音节集(“不同音节组”),另一种字符串包含相同的音节集,但顺序不同(“相同音节组”)。我们通过测量对由光谱修改或序列变化组成的测试字符串的反应,评估了两组实验中的鸟类对音节的光谱特征和序列的关注程度。我们的结果表明,区分由不同或相同的音节集组成的字符串所需的试验次数没有差异。两个实验组以相似的方式关注光谱特征的变化,但与训练字符串包含不同的音节集的实验组相比,训练字符串包含相同的音节集的实验组对序列变化的反应更强烈。这一结果表明,当学习音节音系不足以区分两个字符串时,存在一个额外的学习过程来学习音节序列。因此,我们的研究表明,音节音系和序列的相对重要性取决于这些特征在刺激之间的变化程度。这表明鸣禽在识别歌曲时可能会使用的声学特征具有认知灵活性。