نتایج جستجو برای: invective song

تعداد نتایج: 12185  

2001
J. CULLY ELIZABETH CAMPBELL MICHAEL D. BEECHER

In many oscine species, young males learn songs that match those of their first breeding-season neighbours. Because sharing songs with neighbours may be advantageous, selection should favour birds that retain the capacity to memorize new songs later in their first year as the birds cannot know for sure who their neighbours will be until spring. We investigated whether song sparrows, Melospiza m...

2009
JEFFREY PODOS SUSAN PETERS

Although songtypes are generally considered to be important functional units in birdsong, they have not been well-characterized in terms of withinand between-songtype variation. We analyzed the song repertoires of 12 adult male song sparrows (Melospiza melodia) from a population in New York. We identified minimal units of production (MUPs), and calculated the degree to which song variants withi...

Journal: :Behavioral ecology : official journal of the International Society for Behavioral Ecology 2010
Samuel P Caro Kendra B Sewall Katrina G Salvante Keith W Sockman

Sexually reproducing organisms should mate with the highest quality individuals that they can. When female songbirds choose a mate, they are thought to use several aspects of male song that reflect his quality. Under resource-limited environmental conditions, male Lincoln's sparrows (Melospiza lincolnii) vary among one another in several aspects of song quality, including song length, song comp...

Journal: :Current Biology 2007
Sharon M.H. Gobes Johan J. Bolhuis

Songbirds learn their song from an adult conspecific tutor when they are young, much like the acquisition of speech in human infants. When an adult zebra finch is re-exposed to its tutor's song, there is increased neuronal activation in the caudomedial nidopallium (NCM), the songbird equivalent of the auditory association cortex. This neuronal activation is related to the fidelity of song imita...

2010
Leigh W. Simmons Robin M. Tinghitella Marlene Zuk

Acoustic signals used by males to attract females are among the most prominent examples of secondary sexual traits, yet we have only limited understanding of their genetic architecture. Male crickets produce a calling song to attract females and then switch to a courtship song that incites mounting by females once they are at close range. Although we know much about the genetics of cricket call...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2013
Beau A Alward Jacques Balthazart Gregory F Ball

Steroid hormones regulate multiple but distinct aspects of social behaviors. Testosterone (T) has multiple effects on learned courtship song in that it regulates both the motivation to sing in a particular social context as well as the quality of song produced. The neural substrate(s) where T acts to regulate the motivation to sing as opposed to other aspects of song has not been definitively c...

Journal: :Hormones and behavior 2003
Heather Williams Denise M Connor Jennifer W Hill

Zebra finches are age-limited learners; males crystallize their songs at 90 days and do not subsequently alter those songs. However, a variety of interventions, including deafening and syringeal denervation, result in long-term changes to the crystallized song. These changes can be prevented by lesioning nucleus LMAN. As different social contexts for song production result in differential activ...

Journal: :Behavioural brain research 2014
Sascha Helduser Maren Westkott Klaus Pawelzik Onur Güntürkün

The active generation of behavioral variability is thought to be a pivotal element in reinforcement based learning. One example for this principle is song learning in oscine birds. Oscines possess a highly specialized set of brain areas that compose the song system. It is yet unclear how the song system evolved. One important hypothesis assumes a motor origin of the song system, i.e. the song s...

Journal: :The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 2008
Jennifer L Miksis-Olds John R Buck Michael J Noad Douglas H Cato M Dale Stokes

Songs produced by migrating whales were recorded off the coast of Queensland, Australia, over six consecutive weeks in 2003. Forty-eight independent song sessions were analyzed using information theory techniques. The average length of the songs estimated by correlation analysis was approximately 100 units, with song sessions lasting from 300 to over 3100 units. Song entropy, a measure of struc...

2009
CHRISTINE LATTIN GARY RITCHISON

—Songs of individual male Blue Grosbeaks (Passerina caerulea) typically begin with the same combination of elements, but the sequence and number of elements in the latter portion of songs vary. We examined the possible functions of within-song variation in Blue Grosbeaks at the Blue Grass Army Depot near Richmond, Kentucky, USA from 15 April to 31 July 2007. We examined singing rates and song c...

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