Abstract

Song perception in songbirds, just as music and speech perception in humans, requires processing the spectral and temporal structure found in the succession of song-syllables. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging and synthetic songs that preserved exclusively either the temporal or the spectral structure of natural song, we investigated how vocalizations are processed in the avian forebrain. We found bilateral and equal activation of the primary auditory region, field L. The more ventral regions of field L showed depressed responses to the synthetic songs that lacked spectral structure. These ventral regions included subarea L3, medial-ventral subarea L and potentially the secondary auditory region caudal medial nidopallium. In addition, field L as a whole showed unexpected increased responses to the temporally filtered songs and this increase was the largest in the dorsal regions. These dorsal regions included L1 and the dorsal subareas L and L2b. Therefore, the ventral region of field L appears to be more sensitive to the preservation of both spectral and temporal information in the context of song processing. We did not find any differences in responses to playback of the bird's own song vs other familiar conspecific songs. We also investigated the effect of three commonly used anaesthetics on the blood oxygen level-dependent response: medetomidine, urethane and isoflurane. The extent of the area activated and the stimulus selectivity depended on the type of anaesthetic. We discuss these results in the context of what is known about the locus of action of the anaesthetics, and reports of neural activity measured in electrophysiological experiments.

Highlights

  • Auditory perceptual categories are coarsely divided into loudness, rhythm or tempo, pitch and timbre, and it has been postulated that separate neural systems implementing different computations might underlie these different percepts

  • Because our study is to date one of the first studies of neural activity in birds using the blood oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) technique, we investigated the effect of different anaesthetics on the response

  • Our study showed robust BOLD activity in the avian primary auditory forebrain in response to conspecific songs (CON) as well as to spectrally and temporally filtered versions of the song

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Summary

Introduction

Auditory perceptual categories are coarsely divided into loudness, rhythm or tempo, pitch (voicing and prosody in speech) and timbre (formants in speech), and it has been postulated that separate neural systems implementing different computations might underlie these different percepts. Neuroimaging and neurological studies of human music performance, perception and comprehension have shown that neural systems underlying music and speech processing are distributed throughout the left and right cerebral and cerebellar hemispheres, with different aspects of music processed by distinct neural circuits (Liegeois-Chauvel et al, 1998; Zatorre, 2001; Griffiths, 2003; Kohlmetz et al, 2003; Di Pietro et al, 2004; Murayama et al, 2004; Schmithorst, 2005). A large number of studies has shown specialization at the level of single neurons for acoustical features underlying different perceptual attributes (reviewed in Eggermont, 2001). Re-use of this article is permitted in accordance with the Creative Commons Deed, Attribution 2.5, which does not permit commercial exploitation

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