Left turn in speech research—Key insights in study of zebra finches

Left turn in speech research--Key insights in study of zebra finches
Songbirds such as the zebra finch are of special interest in the study of speech because they learn to sing as humans learn to talk. Image: Wikimedia Common

Baby songbirds learn to sing by imitation, just as human babies do. So researchers at Harvard and Utrecht University, in the Netherlands, have been studying the brains of zebra finches—red-beaked, white-breasted songbirds—for clues to how young birds and human infants learn vocalization on a neuronal level.

While a baby bird mimicking the chirps of his "tutor" may seem far removed from human learning, the researchers at the two universities found that the songs of the birds and human language are both processed in similar areas on the left sides of the two very different brains. The discovery was published last month in the .

"You need a number of different that together give rise to ," says co-author Sharon Gobes, a researcher in Harvard's Department of Organismic and and a professor of neuroscience at Wellesley College. "You need an auditory area to perceive and store sounds, and a motor area to produce them. So evolution finds a solution, probably the simplest, which is why both [bird and human] species may have evolved lateralization."

Songbirds are of particular interest because they do something few animals can do: learn to speak. Our nearest ancestors, apes, don't learn new vocalizations—theirs are inborn—so we can't learn about language by studying their brains. But songbirds learn to sing as humans learn to talk—during a critical period, by imitating a parent. So by studying birdsong, we may gain insight into the underpinnings of human speech.

Why song and speech are lateralized to the left in both songbirds and humans remains a mystery. But Sanne Moorman, a doctoral student at Utrecht University and first author of the study, has some ideas.

"If you only use one hemisphere for language or song, you have more space left for something else," she said. Evolution seems to have built our brains and the birds' in the most economical way.

More information: www.pnas.org/content/109/31/12 … 5a-b717-7aed534de244

Provided by Harvard University

This story is published courtesy of the Harvard Gazette, Harvard University's official newspaper. For additional university news, visit Harvard.edu.

Citation: Left turn in speech research—Key insights in study of zebra finches (2012, August 24) retrieved 24 April 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2012-08-left-speech-researchkey-insights-zebra.html
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