masterThesis
Experiências auditivas na juventude alteram a discriminação auditiva no Mandarim-Diamante (Taeniopygia guttata)
Fecha
2021-03-25Registro en:
BARBALHO, Gabriela Peixoto. Experiências auditivas na juventude alteram a discriminação auditiva no Mandarim-Diamante (Taeniopygia guttata). 2021. 58f. Dissertação (Mestrado em Neurociências) - Instituto do Cérebro, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte, Natal, 2021.
Autor
Barbalho, Gabriela Peixoto
Resumen
Songbirds are considered one of the best animal models to investigate the neurobiological basis
of vocal learning. As in humans, these animals have distinct phases for vocal learning that are
influenced by social and motor experiences. More specifically, social deprivation in songbirds
can generate deficits in the individual's vocal production, whereas singing prevention delays
vocal maturation. However, it is not completely clear whether limited experience during
development can affect the animal's auditory discrimination abilities, a well-known
phenomenon in humans. To address this question, we manipulate social and motor practice
experiences in zebra finches, the most widely used songbird species. We first confirmed that
our manipulation altered vocal learning, without grossly affecting development. More
precisely, socially deprived animals showed abnormal songs, typical of animals lacking a song
model. In contrast, juvenile animals where singing practice was limited continued to produce
immature vocalizations as adults. Notably, behavioral experiments demonstrated that control
animals, i.e., animals with normal social experiences, showed a lower performance in auditory
discrimination tasks compared to isolated and juvenile animals. Conversely, sing-limited did
not differ from control birds. These results suggest that early development auditory experiences
may influence the discriminatory capacity in adult zebra finches, while vocal practice appears
to have little influence in the performance of adult birds. That is, birds that are exposed to
normal social experiences during postnatal development may have diminished ability to
discriminate conspecific songs. Such interpretation is in agreement with the increased
specificity observed in auditory neurons, and would parallel the perceptual losses observed
during speech acquisition in humans.