Rapid encoding of an internal model for imitative learning

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Abstract

As in human infant speech development, vocal imitation in songbirds involves sensory acquisition and memorization of adult-produced vocal signals, followed by a protracted phase of vocal motor practice. The internal model of adult tutor song in the juvenile male brain, termed 'the template', is central to the vocal imitation process. However, even the most fundamental aspects of the template, such as when, where and how it is encoded in the brain, remain poorly understood. A major impediment to progress is that current studies of songbird vocal learning use protracted tutoring over days, weeks or months, complicating dissection of the template encoding process. Here, we take the key step of tightly constraining the timing of template acquisition. We show that, in the zebra finch, template encoding can be time locked to, on average, a 2 h period of juvenile life and based on just 75 s of cumulative tutor song exposure. Crucially, we find that vocal changes occurring on the day of training correlate with eventual imitative success. This paradigm will lead to insights on howthe template is instantiated in the songbird brain, with general implications for deciphering howinternal models are formed to guide learning of complex social behaviours. © 2014 The Authors.

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Deshpande, M., Pirlepesov, F., & Lints, T. (2014). Rapid encoding of an internal model for imitative learning. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 281(1781). https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2013.2630

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