Department of Psychology, Uris Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA.
Department of Psychology, Uris Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA.
Curr Biol. 2019 Feb 18;29(4):631-636.e3. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2018.12.026. Epub 2019 Jan 31.
Learning of song in birds provides a powerful model for human speech development [1-3]. However, the degree to which songbirds and humans share social mechanisms of vocal learning is unknown. Although it has been demonstrated as a vocal learning mechanism in human infants [3-6], learning via active social feedback is considered rare and atypical among non-human animals [7]. We report here the first evidence that song learning in the zebra finch (Taeniopygia guttata), the most common model species of vocal learning and development, utilizes socially guided vocal learning. We demonstrate experimentally that the songs of juvenile zebra finches are guided toward mature vocal forms by real-time visual feedback from adult females that is contingent on their early, immature vocalizations. Using a video playback paradigm, we found that juvenile birds that received non-vocal female feedback contingently on their immature song learned significantly better and more accurate song than did yoked controls that received identical but non-contingent feedback. Both contingent and non-contingent groups sang at similar rates. Thus, we have provided the first evidence suggesting that non-imitative social learning is a crucial, potentially widespread mechanism of vocal development and have established a foundational parallel between humans and our most ubiquitous animal model of vocal learning: the crucial role of social feedback to immature vocalizations in the development of communication.
鸟类的学习歌曲为人类言语发展提供了强有力的模型[1-3]。然而,鸣禽和人类在多大程度上共享声音学习的社会机制尚不清楚。尽管在人类婴儿中已经证明了这种机制是一种声音学习机制[3-6],但通过主动的社会反馈进行学习被认为在非人类动物中很少见且非典型[7]。我们在此报告了第一个证据,表明斑马雀(Taeniopygia guttata)的歌曲学习利用了社会指导的声音学习,斑马雀是最常见的声音学习和发展模式物种。我们通过实验证明,幼年斑马雀的歌声通过成年雌性的实时视觉反馈被引导到成熟的声音形式,而这种反馈是基于它们早期的不成熟的叫声。使用视频播放范式,我们发现,与接受相同但非条件反馈的配对对照组相比,那些根据自己不成熟的歌声接受雌性非声音条件反馈的幼鸟学习的歌曲明显更好且更准确。有条件和无条件的两组以相似的速度唱歌。因此,我们提供了第一个证据,表明非模仿性社会学习是声音发展的关键、潜在广泛的机制,并在人类和我们最常见的声音学习动物模型之间建立了一个基础平行关系:社会反馈对不成熟声音在交流发展中的关键作用。