Abstract
Context dependency is a key feature in sequential structures of human language, which requires reference between words far apart in the produced sequence. Assessing how long the past context has an effect on the current status provides crucial information to understand the mechanism for complex sequential behaviors. Birdsongs serve as a representative model for studying the context dependency in sequential signals produced by non-human animals, while previous reports were upper-bounded by methodological limitations. Here, we newly estimated the context dependency in birdsongs in a more scalable way using a modern neural-network-based language model whose accessible context length is sufficiently long. The detected context dependency was beyond the order of traditional Markovian models of birdsong, but was consistent with previous experimental investigations. We also studied the relation between the assumed/auto-detected vocabulary size of birdsong (i.e., fine- vs. coarse-grained syllable classifications) and the context dependency. It turned out that the larger vocabulary (or the more fine-grained classification) is assumed, the shorter context dependency is detected.
Highlights
Making behavioral decisions based on past information is a crucial task in the life of humans and animals [1, 2]
We investigated context dependency in over ten-hour recordings of Bengalese finches’ songs using a neural-network-based language model, whose flexible fitting enabled nonparametric analysis of the birdsong
We proposed an end-to-end unsupervised clustering method of song elements based on a statistical optimization married with an artificial neural network
Summary
Making behavioral decisions based on past information is a crucial task in the life of humans and animals [1, 2] It is an important inquiry in biology how far past events have an effect on animal behaviors. Semantically plausible words are selected based on the topic of preceding sentences, as exemplified by the appropriateness of olive over cotton after “sugar” and “salt” are used in the same speech/document. Such dependence on the production history is called context dependency and is considered a characteristic property of human languages [3,4,5,6]
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