neurosciencestuff:

Do birdsong and human speech share biological roots?

Do songbirds and humans have common biological hardwiring that shapes how they produce and perceive sounds?

Scientists who study birdsong have been intrigued for some time by
the possibility that human speech and music may be rooted in biological
processes shared across a variety of animals. Now, research by McGill
University biologists provides new evidence to support this idea.

In a series of experiments, the researchers found that young zebra
finches – a species often used to study birdsong – are intrinsically
biased to learn to produce particular kinds of sound patterns over
others. “In addition, these sound patterns resembled patterns that are
frequently observed across human languages and in music,” says Jon
Sakata, Associate Professor of Biology at McGill and senior author of a
paper published online in Current Biology on Nov. 22.

On the shoulders of Chomsky

The idea for the experiments was inspired by current hypotheses on
human language and music. Linguists have long found that the world’s
languages share many common features, termed “universals.” These
features encompass the syntactic structure of languages (e.g., word
order) as well as finer acoustic patterns of speech, such as the timing,
pitch, and stress of utterances. Some theorists, including Noam
Chomsky, have postulated that these patterns reflect a “universal
grammar” built on innate brain mechanisms that promote and bias language
learning. Researchers continue to debate the extent of these innate
brain mechanisms, in part because of the potential for cultural
propagation to account for universals.

At the same time, vast surveys of zebra finch songs have documented a
variety of acoustic patterns found universally across populations.
“Because the nature of these universals bears similarity to those in
humans and because songbirds learn their vocalizations much in the same
way that humans acquire speech and language, we were motivated to test
biological predisposition in vocal learning in songbirds,” says Logan
James, a PhD student in Sakata’s lab and co-author of the new study.

A buffet of birdsong

In order to isolate biological predispositions, James and Sakata
individually tutored young zebra finches with songs consisting of five
acoustic elements arranged in every possible sequence. The birds were
exposed to each sequence permutation in equal proportion and in a random
order. Each finch therefore had to individually “choose” which
sequences to produce from this buffet of birdsong.

In the end, the patterns that the laboratory-raised birds preferred
to produce were highly similar to those observed in natural populations
of birds. For example, like wild zebra finches, birds tutored with
randomized sequences often placed a “distance call” – a long,
low-pitched vocalization – at the end of their song.

Other sounds were much more likely to appear in the beginning or
middle of the song; for example, short and high-pitched vocalizations
were more likely to be produced in the middle of song than at the
beginning or end of song. This matches patterns observed across diverse
languages and in music, in which sounds at the end of phrases tend to be
longer and lower in pitch than sounds in the middle.

Future research avenues

“These findings have important contributions for our understanding
of human speech and music,” says Caroline Palmer, a Professor of
Psychology at McGill who was not involved in the study. “The research,
which controls the birds’ learning environment in ways that are not
possible with young children, suggests that statistical learning alone
– the degree to which one is exposed to specific acoustic patterns –
cannot account for song (or speech) preferences. Other principles, such
as universal grammars and perceptual organization, are more likely to
account for why human infants as well as juvenile birds are predisposed
to prefer some auditory patterns.”

Sakata, who is also a member of the Centre for Research on Brain, Language and Music (CRBLM),
says the study opens up many avenues of future work for his team with
speech, language, and music researchers. “In the immediate future,” he
says, “we want to reveal how auditory processing mechanisms in the
brain, as well as aspects of motor learning and control, underlie these
learning biases.”

Denise Klein, Director of the CRBLM and neuroscientist at the
Montreal Neurological Institute, says James’ and Sakata’s study
“provides insights on universals of vocal communication, helping to
advance our understanding of the neurobiological bases of speech and
music.”

tzeentchs-secretary:

tzeentchs-secretary:

fat-birds:

nonbinarypeach:

dear-tumb1r:

becausebirds:

When you’re trying to do homework but you can’t because birds

Human: *attempts typing*

Birbs: >:V >:V >:V >:V >:V >:V >:V >:V >:V >:V >:V >:V >:V >:V >:V >:V >:V >:V >:V >:V >:V >:V >:V >:V >:V >:V >:V >:V >:V >:V

these boyos sound like when you push an animal crossing villager into a hole

oh my word

@why-animals-do-the-thing Why do they not fly away at the hands and beep loudly?

@rose-of-pollux informs me that this is the begging for food call. I am pleased with this information

Left: finch!Illya and finch!Napoleon when they were 3 months old

Right: finch!Napoleon and finch!Illya today, 2 years later.

The basket is bigger and so are they, but, otherwise… nothing has changed.

As a side note, if given the opportunity, each and every bird, no matter how small, will eventually reveal that the KT extinction event was nothing more than a mere inconvenience, and that dinosaurs still roam the Earth.

image

This observation brought to you by finch!Napoleon, who unleashed every ounce of Cretaceous rage he possessed upon me when I attempted to check on him while he was in the nest basket.  In my defense, I wanted to make sure he wasn’t pulling feathers to line the nest again, as he has done before.  In his defense, attacking a giant primate who was poking her finger into the nest basket was 1000% the logical course of action and I really should have expected that outcome.

Good news is that he has not been pulling feathers again, and he and I have come to an agreement about keeping my clumsy primate fingers out of his basket, for which finch!Illya is the only other being allowed entry.

Bad news is that he’s been eyeing that Zelda poster behind him to shred with his beak for further nesting material.  Note to self: move poster.