Abstract

Cortico-basal ganglia circuits are thought to mediate goal-directed learning by a process of outcome evaluation to gradually select appropriate motor actions. We investigated spiking activity in core and shell subregions of the cortical nucleus LMAN during development as juvenile zebra finches are actively engaged in evaluating feedback of self-generated behavior in relation to their memorized tutor song (the goal). Spiking patterns of single neurons in both core and shell subregions during singing correlated with acoustic similarity to tutor syllables, suggesting a process of outcome evaluation. Both core and shell neurons encoded tutor similarity via either increases or decreases in firing rate, although only shell neurons showed a significant association at the population level. Tutor similarity predicted firing rates most strongly during early stages of learning, and shell but not core neurons showed decreases in response variability across development, suggesting that the activity of shell neurons reflects the progression of learning.

Highlights

  • Recurrent cortico-basal ganglia circuits mediate procedural skill learning, which involves goal-oriented evaluation of behavioral outcomes to gradually select appropriate motor actions

  • Neural control of vocal learning in juvenile zebra finches (Taeniopygia guttata) is vested in cortico-basal ganglia loops that emanate from the cortical nucleus LMAN (Aronov et al, 2008; Bottjer et al, 1984; Scharff and Nottebohm, 1991)

  • Excitatory response strength was marginally higher in SHELL neurons, whereas suppressed response strength did not differ between compared with quiet baseline periods (CORE) and SHELL (Table 1; Mann-Whitney tests: singing-excited neurons U = 1768, p=0.06, singing-suppressed neurons U = 459, p=0.90)

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Summary

Introduction

Recurrent cortico-basal ganglia circuits mediate procedural skill learning, which involves goal-oriented evaluation of behavioral outcomes to gradually select appropriate motor actions. Similar to infants learning speech, juvenile songbirds memorize vocal sounds of an adult tutor. They progressively refine their own vocal behavior to imitate the tutor song through iterative comparisons between feedback of their own vocalizations and tutor sounds. Successful acquisition requires the evaluation of behavioral feedback against a representation of the goal (tutor song) to guide the gradual acquisition of an accurate imitation during the sensorimotor stage of vocal learning.

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