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Birdsong

Current Biology, 2022
Have your ever felt as happy as a lark, feathered your nest or taken someone under your wing? As we watch birds, we cannot help but be struck by their uncannily familiar behaviors - singing, nest building, caring for their young - to name just a few. Songbirds - the oscine suborder of perching birds that constitute roughly half (∼4,000) of all known ...
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Birdsong.

American Psychologist, 1998
Vocalizations used by birds for territory defense, mate attraction, or both are often referred to as a given species' song. Birdsong refers to the often complex vocalizations produced most frequently by males of species that are members of the songbird order (passeriformes).
G F, Ball, S H, Hulse
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Birdsong and music

Current Biology, 2022
Emily Doolittle introduces the many connections between bird song and human music.
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Neurogenetics of birdsong

Current Opinion in Neurobiology, 2013
Songbirds are a productive model organism to study the neural basis of auditory-guided vocal motor learning. Like human babies, juvenile songbirds learn many of their vocalizations by imitating an adult conspecific. This process is a product of genetic predispositions and the individual's life experience and has been investigated mainly by ...
Scharff, Constance, Adam, Iris
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Birdsong for neurobiologists

Neuron, 1989
Song is a stereotyped behavior, yet its development depends on sensory feedback and learning. Early bird fanciers recognized that young birds must have a good tutor to become a good singer. They also knew that birds could be bred for more elaborate songs, as exemplified by different breeds of canaries selected for different ways of singing. Thus,
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Birdsong: models and mechanisms

Current Opinion in Neurobiology, 2001
Recent studies have provided important information concerning the neural signals that subserve vocal learning in songbirds: advanced signal processing techniques are beginning to clarify the behavioral trajectories followed by developing birds; single-unit physiology in behaving animals is providing important clues about sensory and motor ...
T W, Troyer, S W, Bottjer
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Diversity within a Birdsong

Physical Review Letters, 2002
We present a model for the activities of neural circuits in a nucleus found in the brains of songbirds: the robust nucleus of the archistriatum (RA). This is a fore brain song control nucleus responsible for the phasic and precise neural signals driving vocal and respiratory motor neurons during singing.
Rodrigo, Laje, Gabriel B, Mindlin
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Birdsong

2002
Abstract Male birds sing to selected audiences. The male is a landlord and potential warrior, notifying other males that it is ready to defend its territory. It is also a charming troubadour attempting to convince females that it is the best in town.
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Birdsong's clockwork

Nature Neuroscience, 2002
Recordings from song premotor circuits in singing birds show how a population of neurons may form an explicit representation of time in a motor sequence.
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Birdsongs

This file is an English translation of a Modern Greek poem Κελαδήματα (Birdsongs). This Greek poem is in 89-90 pages from a Greek journal [Ho Logos] (Jan.1919).
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