Low-dimensional dynamical model for the diversity of pressure patterns used in canary song

During song production, oscine birds produce large air sac pressure pulses. During those pulses, energy is transferred to labia located at the juncture between the bronchii and the trachea, inducing the high frequency labial oscillations which are responsible for airflow modulations, i.e., the utter...

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Autores principales: Alonso, L.M., Alliende, J.A., Goller, F., Mindlin, G.B.
Formato: JOUR
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Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_15393755_v79_n4_p_Alonso
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spelling todo:paper_15393755_v79_n4_p_Alonso2023-10-03T16:22:23Z Low-dimensional dynamical model for the diversity of pressure patterns used in canary song Alonso, L.M. Alliende, J.A. Goller, F. Mindlin, G.B. Canary songs Dynamical model High frequency Morphological features Normal form Oscine birds Pressure patterns Sac pressure Simple model Subharmonic solutions DC generators Nonlinear systems Range finding During song production, oscine birds produce large air sac pressure pulses. During those pulses, energy is transferred to labia located at the juncture between the bronchii and the trachea, inducing the high frequency labial oscillations which are responsible for airflow modulations, i.e., the uttered sound. In order to generate diverse syllables, canaries (Serinus canaria) use a set of air sac pressure patterns with characteristic shapes. In this work we show that these different shapes can be approximated by the subharmonic solutions of a forced normal form. This simple model is built from identifying dynamical elements which allow to reproduce the shape of the pressure pattern corresponding to one syllable type. Remarkably, integrating that simple model for other parameters allows to recover the other pressure patterns used during song. Interpreting the diversity of these physiological gestures as subharmonic solutions of a simple nonlinear system allows us to account simultaneously for their morphological features as well as for the syllabic timing and suggests a strategy for the generation of complex motor patterns. © 2009 The American Physical Society. Fil:Alonso, L.M. 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_v79_n4_p_Alonso
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
topic Canary songs
Dynamical model
High frequency
Morphological features
Normal form
Oscine birds
Pressure patterns
Sac pressure
Simple model
Subharmonic solutions
DC generators
Nonlinear systems
Range finding
spellingShingle Canary songs
Dynamical model
High frequency
Morphological features
Normal form
Oscine birds
Pressure patterns
Sac pressure
Simple model
Subharmonic solutions
DC generators
Nonlinear systems
Range finding
Alonso, L.M.
Alliende, J.A.
Goller, F.
Mindlin, G.B.
Low-dimensional dynamical model for the diversity of pressure patterns used in canary song
topic_facet Canary songs
Dynamical model
High frequency
Morphological features
Normal form
Oscine birds
Pressure patterns
Sac pressure
Simple model
Subharmonic solutions
DC generators
Nonlinear systems
Range finding
description During song production, oscine birds produce large air sac pressure pulses. During those pulses, energy is transferred to labia located at the juncture between the bronchii and the trachea, inducing the high frequency labial oscillations which are responsible for airflow modulations, i.e., the uttered sound. In order to generate diverse syllables, canaries (Serinus canaria) use a set of air sac pressure patterns with characteristic shapes. In this work we show that these different shapes can be approximated by the subharmonic solutions of a forced normal form. This simple model is built from identifying dynamical elements which allow to reproduce the shape of the pressure pattern corresponding to one syllable type. Remarkably, integrating that simple model for other parameters allows to recover the other pressure patterns used during song. Interpreting the diversity of these physiological gestures as subharmonic solutions of a simple nonlinear system allows us to account simultaneously for their morphological features as well as for the syllabic timing and suggests a strategy for the generation of complex motor patterns. © 2009 The American Physical Society.
format JOUR
author Alonso, L.M.
Alliende, J.A.
Goller, F.
Mindlin, G.B.
author_facet Alonso, L.M.
Alliende, J.A.
Goller, F.
Mindlin, G.B.
author_sort Alonso, L.M.
title Low-dimensional dynamical model for the diversity of pressure patterns used in canary song
title_short Low-dimensional dynamical model for the diversity of pressure patterns used in canary song
title_full Low-dimensional dynamical model for the diversity of pressure patterns used in canary song
title_fullStr Low-dimensional dynamical model for the diversity of pressure patterns used in canary song
title_full_unstemmed Low-dimensional dynamical model for the diversity of pressure patterns used in canary song
title_sort low-dimensional dynamical model for the diversity of pressure patterns used in canary song
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_15393755_v79_n4_p_Alonso
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