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Neural dynamics underlying birdsong practice and performance
- Source :
- Nature
- Publication Year :
- 2020
-
Abstract
- Musical and athletic skills are learned and maintained through intensive practice to enable precise and reliable performance for an audience. Consequently, understanding such complex behaviours requires insight into how the brain functions during both practice and performance. Male zebra finches learn to produce courtship songs that are more varied when alone and more stereotyped in the presence of females1. These differences are thought to reflect song practice and performance, respectively2,3, providing a useful system in which to explore how neurons encode and regulate motor variability in these two states. Here we show that calcium signals in ensembles of spiny neurons (SNs) in the basal ganglia are highly variable relative to their cortical afferents during song practice. By contrast, SN calcium signals are strongly suppressed during female-directed performance, and optogenetically suppressing SNs during practice strongly reduces vocal variability. Unsupervised learning methods4,5 show that specific SN activity patterns map onto distinct song practice variants. Finally, we establish that noradrenergic signalling reduces vocal variability by directly suppressing SN activity. Thus, SN ensembles encode and drive vocal exploration during practice, and the noradrenergic suppression of SN activity promotes stereotyped and precise song performance for an audience. In male zebra finches, song practice and courtship song performance are associated with distinct patterns of neural activity in the basal ganglia, resulting in reduced vocal variability during performance.
- Subjects :
- Adrenergic Neurons
Male
animal structures
media_common.quotation_subject
Models, Neurological
Social behaviour
Biology
Basal Ganglia
Article
Courtship
Neural activity
Basal ganglia
Animals
Calcium Signaling
media_common
Neurons
Multidisciplinary
Contrast (music)
nervous system
Dynamics (music)
behavior and behavior mechanisms
Female
Finches
Vocalization, Animal
Neuroscience
psychological phenomena and processes
Psychomotor Performance
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 14764687
- Volume :
- 599
- Issue :
- 7886
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Nature
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....e936dde77c61306e6e0fe0452eea83cb