Abstract

Cognitive processes like the formation of social memories can shape the nature of social interactions between conspecifics. Male songbirds use vocal signals during courtship interactions with females, but the degree to which social memory and familiarity influences the likelihood and structure of male courtship song remains largely unknown. Using a habituation-dishabituation paradigm, we found that a single, brief (<30 s) exposure to a female led to the formation of a short-term memory for that female: adult male Bengalese finches were significantly less likely to produce courtship song to an individual female when re-exposed to her 5 min later (i.e., habituation). Familiarity also rapidly decreased the duration of courtship songs but did not affect other measures of song performance (e.g., song tempo and the stereotypy of syllable structure and sequencing). Consistent with a contribution of social memory to the decrease in courtship song with repeated exposures to the same female, the likelihood that male Bengalese finches produced courtship song increased when they were exposed to a different female (i.e., dishabituation). Three consecutive exposures to individual females also led to the formation of a longer-term memory that persisted over days. Specifically, when courtship song production was assessed 2 days after initial exposures to females, males produced fewer and shorter courtship songs to familiar females than to unfamiliar females. Measures of song performance, however, were not different between courtship songs produced to familiar and unfamiliar females. The formation of a longer-term memory for individual females seemed to require at least three exposures because males did not differentially produce courtship song to unfamiliar females and females that they had been exposed to only once or twice. Taken together, these data indicate that brief exposures to individual females led to the rapid formation and persistence of social memories and support the existence of distinct mechanisms underlying the motivation to produce and the performance of courtship song.

Highlights

  • The expression of social behaviors is modulated by cognitive processes

  • We observed that the proportion of presentations in which a male produced courtship song significantly decreased with repeated exposures to an individual female (F(2,30) = 6.1, p < 0.0001; Figure 2)

  • Consistent with the notion that social memory contributes to changes in courtship song production, we found that the proportion of males producing courtship song generally decreased when males were exposed to the same female across consecutive presentations

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Summary

Introduction

Social memory and familiarity can influence the expression of various forms of social behavior, including reproductive (Miller, 1979; O’Loghlen and Beecher, 1999; Ophir and Galef, 2004; Vignal et al, 2008; Griffith and Ejima, 2009; Iwasaki et al, 2013; Heinig et al, 2014), parental (McCabe and Horn, 1994; Horn, 2004; Town and McCabe, 2011), and aggressive behaviors (Stoddard et al, 1991; Temeles, 1994; Bradbury and Vehrencamp, 2011; Nishizawa et al, 2011; Grabowska-Zhang et al, 2012; Jaška et al, 2015). As such, understanding the processes underlying memory formation and individual recognition are important for understanding mechanisms underlying the expression of social behaviors (Insel and Fernald, 2004)

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