
A male and female zebra finch, with lines suggesting the paths that males use to produce songs for female finches. Photo by Daniel E. Baleckaitis
When a bird sings, what goes on inside its brain to produce those clear, silvery strings of sound? Studies have suggested that something like a metronome worked independently inside bird brains, ticking away to trigger individual notes. But , published today in Nature by lead author Ana Amador, a post-doctoral researcher from the , shows that the part of the brain responsible for bird song is far more intricately organized around the exact physical motions that produce a bird鈥檚 tunes鈥攑ossibly hinting at the mechanisms that help to steer our own speech.
By showing that the movements involved in switching notes during bird song are actually made up of a subset of more refined actions, Amador found that each of these motions are encoded in neurons in an area of the brain called the 鈥攐r HVC鈥攖hat has long been associated with birdsong. But the neurons could have a different role in executing song than the one that has always been recognized, says , the lead neuroscientist in whose lab the research was conducted. This is something he and the team of researchers found by studying the exact timing of the throat motions that produce notes, and the firing of neurons in the brain.
The researchers used 鈥攂irds that are typically reliable candidates, because their song is 鈥渧ery regular, very structured,鈥 says Margoliash, and the male courtship tunes incredibly precise. All of this makes their song a neat, predictable model to work with.
By attaching fine recording wires to the birds鈥 brains, and using a mathematical model devised by physics professor at the University of Buenos Aires, to record the small pressures and tensions in the syrinx鈥攁 bird鈥檚 equivalent of a voice box鈥攖he researchers were able to figure out when the finch鈥檚 neurons were firing in relation to when the sounds were made. 鈥淭he bird structures his song based on these little gestures鈥攙ocal movements鈥攖hat include pressure as a function of time and tension as a function of time,鈥 Margoliash said.
The results showed that contrary to the ideas presented in some other studies, neurons don鈥檛 directly control the noises that come out of a bird鈥檚 beak. Certainly, the HVC region is known to ultimately shape sounds, says Margoliash鈥攂ut the team was able to show when they matched up the bird鈥檚 syrinx motions with the firing neurons, that the neurons fired just as transitions were occurring between one note and another, a little too slowly to actually be driving the change.
The findings suggest that HVC neurons are then essentially 鈥渓ogging the information about what鈥檚 expected to be happening,鈥 Margoliash explains. 鈥淭he idea then is that as the bird is singing, it is getting feedback information.鈥
But how is this valuable to the finch? Having audio feedback allows a bird to recognize its own tunes; to essentially know where it is in its song repertoire, says Margoliash. 鈥淏y having a marker of the time when the feedback info occurred鈥t may be useful in the future, when the action is repeated鈥濃攐r when the bird has cause to adjust its tune.
The research tells us about the neural coding and structure that exists behind sound and speech, because it essentially shows how our brains are wired to drive complex movements. So, says Margoliash, 鈥減roblems in speech show problems with structuring the sequence of events. One everyone knows about [is] stuttering.鈥
Why turn to a finch to tell us more about ourselves? Because humans share some interesting base features with birds. Both song and speech 鈥渁re learned vocalizations,鈥 Margoliash says. Birds require exposure to song during their early development much like humans do. 鈥淏irds have dialects very similar to human dialects,鈥 he adds. And finally, 鈥渟ong birds require auditory feedback to learn their songs鈥濃攚hich is similar to how a baby babbles away to practice the sounds of speech.
Of course, much of what the researchers suggest is hypothesis, based on what they have observed in the lab. Bird song is still a mystery that has much to reveal, and researchers will just keeping adding pieces to the puzzle. Margoliash is one: he鈥檒l keep listening to his zebra finches, which ironically don鈥檛 sing the sweetest of tunes, he says. 鈥淚ts song is a .鈥