Publication | Closed Access
A Brain for All Seasons: Cyclical Anatomical Changes in Song Control Nuclei of the Canary Brain
755
Citations
19
References
1981
Year
MusicAuditory ImageryBrain MechanismMale CanariesSocial SciencesNeural MechanismVocal MusicMusic ProcessingStable Adult SongBehavioral NeuroscienceNeuroecologyNervous SystemNew Song RepertoiresCanary BrainSong Control NucleiBioacousticsNeuroanatomyEvolutionary BiologyAll SeasonsNeuroscienceCentral Nervous SystemMedicineAnimal Behavior
Male canaries that have reached sexual maturity can, in subsequent years, learn new song repertoires. Two telencephalic song control nuclei, the hyperstriatum ventrale, pars caudale, and nucleus robustus archistriatalis are, respectively, 99 and 76 percent larger in the spring, when male canaries are producing stable adult song, than in the fall, at the end of the molt and after several months of not singing. It is hypothesized that such fluctuations reflect an increase and then reduction in numbers of synapses and are related to the yearly ability to acquire new motor coordinations.
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