A rhythm landscape approach to the developmental dynamics of birdsong

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Abstract

Unlike simple biological rhythms, the rhythm of the oscine bird song is a learned time series of diverse sounds that change dynamically during vocal ontogeny. How to quantify rhythm development is one of the most important challenges in behavioural biology. Here, we propose a simple method, called 'rhythm landscape', to visualize and quantify how rhythm structure, which is measured as durational patterns of sounds and silences, emerges and changes over development. Applying this method to the development of Bengalese finch songs, we show that the rhythm structure begins with a broadband rhythm that develops into diverse rhythms largely through branching from precursors. Furthermore, an information-theoretic measure, the Jensen- Shannon divergence, was used to characterize the crystallization process of birdsong rhythm, which started with a high rate of rhythm change and progressed to a stage of slow refinement. This simple method provides a useful description of rhythm development, thereby helping to reveal key temporal constraints on complex biological rhythms.

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Sasahara, K., Tchernichovski, O., Takahasi, M., Suzuki, K., & Okanoya, K. (2015). A rhythm landscape approach to the developmental dynamics of birdsong. Journal of the Royal Society Interface, 12(112). https://doi.org/10.1098/rsif.2015.0802

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