Lateralization as a symmetry breaking process in birdsong

The singing by songbirds is a most convincing example in the animal kingdom of functional lateralization of the brain, a feature usually associated with human language. Lateralization is expressed as one or both of the bird's sound sources being active during the vocalization. Normal songs requ...

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Autores principales: Trevisan, M.A., Cooper, B., Goller, F., Mindlin, G.B.
Formato: JOUR
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Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_15393755_v75_n3_p_Trevisan
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spelling todo:paper_15393755_v75_n3_p_Trevisan2023-10-03T16:22:14Z Lateralization as a symmetry breaking process in birdsong Trevisan, M.A. Cooper, B. Goller, F. Mindlin, G.B. Acoustics Biological organs Birds Brain Formal languages Respiratory mechanics Human language Lateralization Sound sources Symmetry breaking process Biocommunications The singing by songbirds is a most convincing example in the animal kingdom of functional lateralization of the brain, a feature usually associated with human language. Lateralization is expressed as one or both of the bird's sound sources being active during the vocalization. Normal songs require high coordination between the vocal organ and respiratory activity, which is bilaterally symmetric. Moreover, the physical and neural substrate used to produce the song lack obvious asymmetries. In this work we show that complex spatiotemporal patterns of motor activity controlling airflow through the sound sources can be explained in terms of spontaneous symmetry breaking bifurcations. This analysis also provides a framework from which to study the effects of imperfections in the system' s symmetries. A physical model of the avian vocal organ is used to generate synthetic sounds, which allows us to predict acoustical signatures of the song and compare the predictions of the model with experimental data. © 2007 The American Physical Society. Fil:Trevisan, M.A. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina. JOUR info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_15393755_v75_n3_p_Trevisan
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
topic Acoustics
Biological organs
Birds
Brain
Formal languages
Respiratory mechanics
Human language
Lateralization
Sound sources
Symmetry breaking process
Biocommunications
spellingShingle Acoustics
Biological organs
Birds
Brain
Formal languages
Respiratory mechanics
Human language
Lateralization
Sound sources
Symmetry breaking process
Biocommunications
Trevisan, M.A.
Cooper, B.
Goller, F.
Mindlin, G.B.
Lateralization as a symmetry breaking process in birdsong
topic_facet Acoustics
Biological organs
Birds
Brain
Formal languages
Respiratory mechanics
Human language
Lateralization
Sound sources
Symmetry breaking process
Biocommunications
description The singing by songbirds is a most convincing example in the animal kingdom of functional lateralization of the brain, a feature usually associated with human language. Lateralization is expressed as one or both of the bird's sound sources being active during the vocalization. Normal songs require high coordination between the vocal organ and respiratory activity, which is bilaterally symmetric. Moreover, the physical and neural substrate used to produce the song lack obvious asymmetries. In this work we show that complex spatiotemporal patterns of motor activity controlling airflow through the sound sources can be explained in terms of spontaneous symmetry breaking bifurcations. This analysis also provides a framework from which to study the effects of imperfections in the system' s symmetries. A physical model of the avian vocal organ is used to generate synthetic sounds, which allows us to predict acoustical signatures of the song and compare the predictions of the model with experimental data. © 2007 The American Physical Society.
format JOUR
author Trevisan, M.A.
Cooper, B.
Goller, F.
Mindlin, G.B.
author_facet Trevisan, M.A.
Cooper, B.
Goller, F.
Mindlin, G.B.
author_sort Trevisan, M.A.
title Lateralization as a symmetry breaking process in birdsong
title_short Lateralization as a symmetry breaking process in birdsong
title_full Lateralization as a symmetry breaking process in birdsong
title_fullStr Lateralization as a symmetry breaking process in birdsong
title_full_unstemmed Lateralization as a symmetry breaking process in birdsong
title_sort lateralization as a symmetry breaking process in birdsong
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_15393755_v75_n3_p_Trevisan
work_keys_str_mv AT trevisanma lateralizationasasymmetrybreakingprocessinbirdsong
AT cooperb lateralizationasasymmetrybreakingprocessinbirdsong
AT gollerf lateralizationasasymmetrybreakingprocessinbirdsong
AT mindlingb lateralizationasasymmetrybreakingprocessinbirdsong
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