Core and Shell Song Systems Unique to the Parrot Brain.

dc.contributor.author

Chakraborty, M

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Walløe, S

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Nedergaard, S

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Fridel, EE

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Dabelsteen, T

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Pakkenberg, B

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Bertelsen, MF

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Dorrestein, GM

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Brauth, SE

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Durand, SE

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Jarvis, ED

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United States

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2015-06-25T14:05:47Z

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2015

dc.description.abstract

The ability to imitate complex sounds is rare, and among birds has been found only in parrots, songbirds, and hummingbirds. Parrots exhibit the most advanced vocal mimicry among non-human animals. A few studies have noted differences in connectivity, brain position and shape in the vocal learning systems of parrots relative to songbirds and hummingbirds. However, only one parrot species, the budgerigar, has been examined and no differences in the presence of song system structures were found with other avian vocal learners. Motivated by questions of whether there are important differences in the vocal systems of parrots relative to other vocal learners, we used specialized constitutive gene expression, singing-driven gene expression, and neural connectivity tracing experiments to further characterize the song system of budgerigars and/or other parrots. We found that the parrot brain uniquely contains a song system within a song system. The parrot "core" song system is similar to the song systems of songbirds and hummingbirds, whereas the "shell" song system is unique to parrots. The core with only rudimentary shell regions were found in the New Zealand kea, representing one of the only living species at a basal divergence with all other parrots, implying that parrots evolved vocal learning systems at least 29 million years ago. Relative size differences in the core and shell regions occur among species, which we suggest could be related to species differences in vocal and cognitive abilities.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26107173

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PONE-D-14-21980

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1932-6203

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/10234

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eng

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Public Library of Science

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PLoS One

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10.1371/journal.pone.0118496

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Animals

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Brain

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Humans

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Learning

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Music

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New Zealand

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Parrots

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Vocalization, Animal

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Core and Shell Song Systems Unique to the Parrot Brain.

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Journal article

pubs.author-url

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26107173

pubs.begin-page

e0118496

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6

pubs.organisational-group

Basic Science Departments

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Duke

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Duke Institute for Brain Sciences

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Institutes and Provost's Academic Units

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Neurobiology

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School of Medicine

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University Institutes and Centers

pubs.publication-status

Published online

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10

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