
Timothy J DevoogdCornell University | CU · Department of Psychology
Timothy J Devoogd
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Publications (77)
Active guidance of vocal learning by conspecifics has recently been found in several species, including some cetaceans and primates. However, in the zebra finch, Taeniopygia guttata, a commonly studied songbird, vocal learning was traditionally considered the product of memorization and imitation of a song model. Only recently have specific social...
Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) are worldwide chemical pollutants that have been linked to disrupted reproduction and altered sexual behaviour in many organisms. However, the effect of developmental PCB-exposure on adult passerine reproductive behaviour remains unknown. A commercial PCB mixture (Aroclor 1242) or an estrogenic congener (PCB 52) wer...
Vertebrate brains differ in overall size, composition and functional capacities, but the evolutionary processes linking these traits are unclear. Two leading models offer opposing views: the concerted model ascribes major dimensions of covariation in brain structures to developmental events, whereas the mosaic model relates divergent structures to...
Natural behaviors, such as foraging, tool use, social interaction, birdsong, and language, exhibit branching sequential structure. Such structure should be learnable if it can be inferred from the statistics of early experience. We report that juvenile zebra finches learn such sequential structure in song. Song learning in finches has been extensiv...
Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) are synthetic chemical pollutants with demonstrated detrimental toxic and developmental effects on humans and wildlife. Laboratory studies suggest that PCBs influence behavior due to their effects on endocrine and neurological systems, yet little is known about the behavioral consequences of sublethal PCB exposure i...
Elaborate male song may restrain competitors in various songbirds, although the exact mechanism, information content and information flow of acoustic signals are not com-pletely understood. Here we focus on the interactions between resident and intruder males using the Eurasian penduline tit Remiz pendulinus. The breeding system of this small passe...
Elaborate male song may restrain competitors in various songbirds, although the exact mechanism, information content and information flow of acoustic signals are not completely understood. Here we focus on the interactions between resident and intruder males using the Eurasian penduline tit Remiz pendulinus. The breeding system of this small passer...
Behavioral specializations are frequently associated with expansions of the brain regions controlling them. This principle of proper mass spans sensory, motor, and cognitive abilities and has been observed in a wide variety of vertebrate species. Yet, it is unknown if this concept extrapolates to entire neural pathways or how selection on a behavio...
It is broadly recognized across the Western Hemisphere that science can provide answers to health and environmental problems and stimulate national development. But in a given region, scientists often face overwhelming barriers to conducting research, and there is far too little interaction among academia, industry, and government on an internation...
Overview Tinbergen (1963) proposed that in order to understand behaviour it is necessary to discover not only its adaptive function and phylogenetic history (now often referred to as ultimate causation) but also its development and physiology (proximate causation). In recent years there has been increasing appreciation of the importance of pursuing...
In many naturalistic studies of the hippocampus wild animals are held in captivity. To test if captivity itself affects hippocampal integrity, adult black-capped chickadees (Poecile atricapilla) were caught in the fall, injected with bromodeoxyuridine to mark neurogenesis, and alternately released to the wild or held in captivity. The wild birds we...
We studied whether polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) may alter the development of song control brain nuclei in zebra finch (Taeniopygia guttata) offspring of pulse-exposed hens. We orally administered 40 microg of Aroclor 1248 to adult female finches before egg laying. When the progeny were 50 d old, we measured the volumes of the song control nucle...
Accurate song perception is likely to be as important for female songbirds as it is for male songbirds. Male zebra finches (Taeniopygia guttata) show differential ZENK expression to conspecific and heterospecific songs by day 30 posthatch in auditory perceptual brain regions such as the caudomedial nidopallium (NCM) and the caudomedial mesopallium...
Most temperate songbird species sing seasonally, and the brain areas involved in producing song (the song system) vary in size alongside the changes in behavior. Black-capped chickadees (Poecile atricapillus) also sing seasonally, and we find that there are changes in the stereotypy and the length of the fee-bee song from the nonbreeding to the bre...
Male songbirds typically require exposure to normal adult conspecific song during development in order to learn a normal song of their own. Females require exposure to conspecific song during development in order to select high-quality, learned song over the incomplete song produced by males reared in isolation. Altering males' opportunity for song...
The effects of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) as compounds that may disrupt endocrine activity and, consequently, alter reproductive performance were investigated in altricial zebra finches (Taeniopygia guttata). The breeding performance and breeding cycle of zebra finches differed significantly between nonexposed birds and those experimentally p...
Song learning in songbirds has been studied extensively in males but not in females. Females prefer songs previously heard, but it is not known whether opportunity for learning during the juvenile period affects the ability of females to judge song quality. We show that early exposure to adult song is required in the development of normal adult fem...
Food-storing birds demonstrate remarkable memory ability in recalling the locations of thousands of hidden food caches. Although this behaviour requires the hippocampus, its synaptic mechanisms are not understood. Here we show the effects of cannabinoid receptor (CB1-R) blockade on spatial memory in food-storing black-capped chickadees (Poecile atr...
Patterns of song perception, learning, and expression differ across species, sexes, and individuals. We can understand the neurobiology of song better by paying attention to these differences. I focus selectively on a few of the studies done in my lab over in recent years to illustrate this.
Food-storing birds use a form of long-term memory to recover their hidden food caches that depends on the hippocampal formation (HF). The authors assessed whether food-storing birds' long-term memory for spatial locations requires N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor (NMDA-R)-dependent synaptic plasticity. Black-capped chickadees (Poecile atricapilla) wer...
Why do birds sing? In many species, because the song attracts or retains a mate. Why do females pay attention? This paper reviews evidence that females may do so because male song can be an honest indicator of attributes of a male's brain that could contribute to his fitness or that of his young. Male songbirds learn and produce their songs using a...
The role of the hippocampal formation (HF) in memory processing was assessed in food-storing black-capped chickadees (Poecile atricapilla) by reversibly inactivating the HF during different memory tests. The memory tests required birds to remember a location based on spatial cues only, or based on a combination of both spatial and distinct visual c...
Previous studies have shown that female sedge warblers choose to mate with males that have more complex songs, and sexual selection has driven the evolution of both song complexity and the size of the major song control area (HVc) in the brain. In songbirds, learning from conspecifics plays a major role in song development and this study investigat...
The hippocampal formation (HF) of food-storing birds is larger than non-storing species, and the size of the HF in food-storing Black-Capped Chickadees (Poecile atricapillus) varies seasonally. We examined whether the volume of the septum, a medial forebrain structure that shares reciprocal connections with the HF, demonstrates the same species and...
The distributions of the neuropeptides substance P (SP) and neuropeptide Y (NPY) were investigated in four songbird species that differ in their food-storing behavior. The food-storing black-capped chickadee (Parus atricapillus) was compared to the non-storing blue tit (Parus caeruleus) and great tit (Parus major) within the avian family Paridae, a...
This chapter builds on the excellent review of avian song development by [Bottjer and Arnold (1986)] that appeared in an earlier volume of this series ([Blass, 1986]). We first summarize the knowledge and perspectives on the neurobiology of song development and production of that time.
We then present an overview of the major advances that have occ...
The volume of the hippocampal formation (HF) in black-capped chickadees (Poecile atri-capillus) varies across the seasons, in parallel with the seasonal cycle in food hoarding. In this study, we estimate cell density and total cell number in the HF across seasons in both juveniles and adults. We find that the seasonal variation in volume is due to...
In many songbird species, females prefer males that sing a larger repertoire of syllables. Males with more elaborate songs have a larger high vocal centre (HVC) nucleus, the highest structure in the song production pathway. HVC size is thus a potential target of sexual selection. Here we provide evidence that the size of the HVC and other song prod...
Black-capped chickadees store food in many different locations in their home range and are able to accurately remember these locations. We measured the number of cells immunopositive for three different Immediate Early Gene products (Fra-1, c-Fos and ZENK) to map neuronal activity in the chickadee Hippocampal Formation (HF) during food storing and...
The volume of the hippocampal formation (HF) in black-capped chickadees (Poecile atricapillus) varies across the seasons, in parallel with the seasonal cycle in food hoarding. In this study, we estimate cell density and total cell number in the HF across seasons in both juveniles and adults. We find that the seasonal variation in volume is due to a...
We revisited the relationship between brain anatomy and song behavior in zebra finches. Consistent with previous studies in other songbirds, we find that differences in volume of the telencephalic song control nucleus HVc is predictive of differences in repertoire size and phrase duration in zebra finches. We extend the study of brain and behavior...
Female sedge warblers select males that have more complex songs as mates. This study tests two predictions concerning HVc, a telencephalic nucleus that is essential for song learning and production: first, that males with more complex songs will have a larger HVc, and second that males who pair successfully will have a larger HVc than unpaired male...
This study investigates the effects of captivity and testosterone treatment on the volumes of brain regions involved in processing visual and spatial information in adult dark-eyed juncos (Junco hyemalis). We treated captive and free-living male juncos with either testosterone-filled or empty implants. Captive juncos had a smaller hippocampal forma...
In our search for relations between vocal learning and neuron structure in the song control nuclei of songbird forebrains, we tested whether differential experience that leads to differences in adult song repertoire would affect dendritic spine density in HVc (also called high vocal center) and RA (robustus archistriatalis). We tape-tutored juvenil...
Cowbirds exhibit extensive variation in their social, territorial, and reproductive behaviors. Nissl-stained brain sections of specimens from a previous study (J. C. Reboreda, N. S. Clayton, & A. Kacelnik, 1996) were used to study the gross anatomy of a song control nucleus in 3 South American cowbirds (bay-winged, Molothrus badius; shiny, M. bonar...
Publisher Summary
This chapter reviews the causes of avian songs. There are more than 4,500 oscine (song bird) species, comprising at least 870 genera in 35 families. Individuals in these species sing as adults. While there is an immense variation across these species in the complexity and organization of songs, several features are characteristic...
The anterior forebrain pathway of the avian song system is involved in juvenile song learning, but its function in adult song behavior is not known. This report uses lesions to study the role of a particular forebrain nucleus, IMAN, in the seasonal regeneration of song in adult white-crowned sparrows (Zonotrichia leucophrys oriantha). White-crowned...
The avian high vocal center (HVC) is a complex forebrain nucleus that coordinates the sensorimotor integration necessary for song learning and production. It receives auditory and potentially somatosensory input, and sends major projections to vocal motor and anterior forebrain nuclei. The HVC has at least four morphological classes of neurons for...
We describe in this paper an in vivo Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) procedure that allows one to obtain three-dimensional high quality images of the entire brain of small passerine birds such as the canary with a slice thickness of 58 micron and an image resolution of 78 microns. This imaging procedure was completed in 70 min on anaesthetised bir...
The phenotype-linked fertility hypothesis states that functional male fertility covaries with male phenotype and that females engage in extra-pair copulations with males with more attractive phenotypes than their partner to obtain direct fertility benefits. We tested this idea in the sedge warbler,Acrocephalus schoenobaenus, a species in which fema...
Determining relations between brain structure and function is a principal focus of evolutionary neurobiology. Here we investigate covariation between singing behaviour and the neuroanatomy in eight species of sylviid warblers from the closely related Acrocephalus and Locustella genera. We found a significant positive correlation between repertoire...
White-throated sparrows are unusual among songbirds in that they occur in two color morphs, white-striped and tan-striped, determined by a chromosomal inversion and maintained by negative assortative mating. These differ in several reproductive behaviors, including amount of singing: white-striped males sing frequently, tan-striped females never si...
Male zebra finches normally learn much of their song during the second month after hatching. This is a period of rapid change throughout the brain. We studied anatomical consequences of manipulating exposure to song. We investigated neurons of lateral MAN (1MAN), a nucleus implicated in song learning (Bottjer et al., 1984), in male and female zebra...
We investigated the development of spiny neurons in the lateral magnocellular nucleus of the anterior neostriatum before, during, and after song learning in male zebra finches (Taeniopygia guttata). The frequency of dendritic spines, dendritic field size, and branching characteristics were quantified at different ages in Golgi-stained tissue using...
Extensive recent research has focused on the potential role of nitric oxide (NO) in synaptic plasticity. Could the capacity to synthesize NO be associated with neural and behavioral plasticity in the song system? The timing of song learning and of major developmental changes in song system anatomy are known. We searched for an association between N...
Black-capped chickadees (Parus atricapillus) in upstate New York show a peak in food-hoarding intensity in October. We caught chickadees at six different times of the year and measured the volume of several brain structures. We found that the hippocampal formation, which is involved in spatial memory for cached food items, has a larger volume, rela...
How does behaviour develop in humans and animals? What are the causal mechanisms governing this behaviour? These important questions are addressed in this book, first published in 1994. All the significant conceptual and empirical advances in this study of behavioural development are discussed in this volume by a wide range of scientists from diffe...
Central components of the vomeronasal system appear to mediate extrahypothalamic control of gonadotropin release during male-induced acceleration of puberty onset in female rodents. In order to describe the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BNST) and to determine whether this component of the vomeronasal system is altered following early puberty...
Song and brain structure are compared amongst 41 species of oscine birds by using the method of independent evolutionary contrasts. We find a significant correlation between the relative volume of the song control centre, the high vocal centre (HVC), and the number of song types typically found in the repertoire. Relative HVC volume is not correlat...
A sexually dimorphic group of cells at the dorsal border of the preoptic/anterior hypothalamic area (POA/AH) of ferrets has been previously identified in Nissl-stained tissue. In this study, Golgi-stained tissue was examined in order 1) to determine whether sex differences exist in dendritic dimensions of neurons from this region, and 2) to assess...
Substantial neural and behavioral plasticity occurs in the avian song system in adulthood. Changes in the volume of one of the song control nuclei, robustus archistriatalis (RA), have been associated with seasonal changes in singing behavior in adult canaries (Serinus canarius) and red-winged blackbirds (Agelaius phoeniceus). The present work asses...
The caudal portion of the hypoglossal nucleus (tracheosyringeal, nXIIts) contains the motor neurons that innervate the syrinx in songbirds. It receives projections from telencephalic and midbrain nuclei that are necessary for song production. Its neurons concentrate androgens. The present study assesses the gross morphology of the hypoglossal nucle...
Enough data are now available on the neurobiology of the avian song system and on the development and performance of song that sophisticated questions on the relations between the behavior and the neurobiology can be addressed. This review describes what is known of sex differences and individual differences in the neurobiology of the song system i...
Much current research in neuroendocrinology concerns how endocrine information acts on the brain. For example, what processes are used early in life to transduce sex differences in gonadal steroids into structural dimorphisms within the brain? Or, to what extent are the actions of steroids on the developing nervous system unique events and to what...
Several song-related regions in the adult zebra finch brain have substantially more neurons in males than in females. Such differences appear to arise from sex differences in circulating steroids during early posthatch life. In the present study, developmental mechanisms involved in the production of sex differences are explored by examinations of...
The caudal portion of the hypoglossal nucleus (nXIIts) contains the motor neurons that control the syrinx in songbirds. In canaries, song occurs seasonally, is principally produced by males, and appears to be produced predominantly by muscles on the left side of the syrinx. The present study measures the effect of seasonal change and manipulation o...
Golgi-impregnated neurons in the song control nucleus hyperstriatum ventralis, pars caudalis (HVc) in male and female canaries (Serinus canarius) have been divided into classes, primarily on the basis of interneuronal variability in spine density and dendritic branching pattern. At least four neuronal classes are found in HVc: aspinous neurons and...
Previous work in songbirds has delimited a neural system responsible for song production and control. Earlier studies have suggested that functional capacity in the song system may be related to the mass of the system in an animal's brain, and that adult plasticity in this neural system may be related to adult capacity for behavioral modification....
Combinations of the Golgi stain, anterograde degeneration, and electron microscopy are used to further characterize the hormone-sensitive "type IV" neuron of the forebrain nucleus robustus archistriatalis (RA) of adult female canaries. Anterograde degeneration was used to "stain," at the electron-microscopic level, the axon terminals of neurons pro...
Previous work on canaries and zebra finches has shown that large differences between the sexes exist in the structure of dendrites in n. robustus archistriatalis (RA), one of the principal nuclei involved in the control of song. This sex difference is associated with a general or complete absence of song in females. If dendritic morphology in RA is...
Following the pioneering work of Nottebohm, the brain regions involved in song production in songbirds have become a focus of extensive research in several laboratories. As both singing behavior and the neuroanatomy of song control regions are strongly affected by sex steroids in many songbird species, this system has become regarded as an ideal mo...
Systemic testosterone treatment induces adult female canaries to develop male-like song. This same treatment induces a doubling in size of the forebrain nucleus robustus archistriatalis (RA), known to be involved in song control, and a 51% increase in the number of synapses formed on RA neurons. In central RA, the number of synaptic vesicles per sy...
Reproductive capability requires synchronization of both endocrine and behavioral components of reproduction. The classic view of reproductive behavior was that there was simply direct stimulation of a behavioral response by the appropriate gonadal steroid. However, it has become clear with recent developments in the field of behavioral endocrinolo...
Most bird species show sex differences in the pattern or frequency of vocalizations, and males either use unique vocalizations or use particular vocalizations more frequently than do females. This chapter discusses the canaries and zebra finches, because most of the neurobiological research to date has been done on these species. It also describes...
Ovariectomized adult female canaries were treated with physiological doses of testosterone, dihydrotestosterone, or estradiol. Singing, which is typical of males, occurred in the testosterone-treated birds but not in any of the other birds. The effect of these hormones was assessed on dendrites from a class of neurons in the nucleus robustus archis...
Quantitative analysis of dendritic structure is widely used in assessing neural relationships in Golgi-stained tissue. Quantitative techniques are tedious and time-consuming. A computer-microscope system is described which speeds data acquisition and analysis. Three neuronal samples are analyzed both by this computerized system and by camera lucida...
Singing in the canary is a learned male behavior controlled predominantly by nuclei in the left hemisphere (Nottebohm and Nottebohm, '76; Nottebohm et al., '76; Nottebohm, '77). These nuclei are several times larger in males than in females (Nottebohm and Arnold, '76). One of the telencephalic song control nuclei, robustus archistriatalis (RA), was...
The relative frequency of appearance of discontinuities in the postsynaptic thickening, or perforations in the subsynaptic
plate, increased with age and experience. Rats reared from weaning in complex or social environments had a significantly higher
proportion of occipital cortical synapses with perforations than did rats reared in isolation. In a...
Sexual dimorphism is described in the dentritic field pattern of Golgi-stained neurons from the dorsomedial preoptic area of adult golden hamsters (Mesocricetus auratus). Data were obtained through a mathematical reconstruction of dentritic densities of neurons sampled from this area in males and females. Males tended to have a central concentratio...
Our contribution to this workshop series is primarily a review of existing literature rather than a presentation of new experimental data. Our central concern is whether experience plays a role in recovery of behavioral function following demonstrable — usually experimentally-induced — brain damage. For the most part, this discussion is restricted...
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Illinois. Bibliography: leaves 104-122.