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3 - Social interaction and vocal development in birds

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 August 2010

Charles T. Snowdon
Affiliation:
University of Wisconsin, Madison
Martine Hausberger
Affiliation:
Université de Rennes I, France
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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Experiments on song development have a long history dating from those performed by the Baron von Pernau with chaffinches (Fringilla coelebs), published in 1768 (Thielcke 1988). The Baron documented regional song dialects, showed that learning was restricted to a time window or “sensitive phase,” and demonstrated the bird's preference for learning songs of conspecifics over those of allospecifics or “stimulus filtering.” With the advent of instrumentation that allowed capture and analyses of sound, i.e., magnetic tape-recording and sound spectrographic technology, Thorpe (1958) was able to test these conclusions objectively. He played tape-recorded conspecific and allospecific songs to hand-raised, naive chaffinches reared in acoustic isolation. His experiments confirmed the existence of sensitive phases and stimulus filtering mechanisms during the song-learning process.

Thorpe's study set a standard for avian song ontogeny protocol: hand-raised naive experimental or pupil birds are isolated in sound-proof chambers and exposed to taperecorded vocalizations of model or tutor birds. An investigator is then able to: (a) control the number of songs played to the experimental birds to determine the minimum number of songs required to effect learning (Petrinovich 1985; Hultsch & Todt 1992; Peters et al. 1992; Hultsch 1993); (b) demonstrate that birds may recognize conspecific song by sound alone (Konishi 1985); and (c) test the effect of sound degradation on the choice of tutors by pupils (Morton et al. 1986).

That social factors could influence the choice of a song tutor by a pupil was first appreciated by Nicolai (1959). His work suggested that tape-tutoring experiments, although valuable, may in some cases test only what pupils can do under the conditions imposed by the investigator and not the pupil's actual or potential capabilities in nature.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1997

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