ETH Zurich
ORCID: 0000-0002-4039-7773Publishes on Animal Vocal Communication and Behavior, Animal Behavior and Reproduction, Marine animal studies overview. 186 papers and 6.1k citations.
Add your photo, update your bio, and get notified when your ranking changes.
Little is known about the biophysical and neuronal circuit mechanisms underlying the generation and learning of behavioral sequences. Songbirds provide a marvelous animal model in which to study these phenomena. By use of a motorized microdrive to record the activity of single neurons in the singing bird, we are beginning to understand the circuits that generate complex vocal sequences. We describe recent experiments elucidating the role of premotor song-control nucleus HVC in the production of song. We find that HVC neurons projecting to premotor nucleus RA each generate a single burst of spikes at a particular time in the song and may form a sparse representation of temporal order. We incorporate this observation into a working hypothesis for the generation of vocal sequences in the songbird, and examine some implications for song learning.