2015
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1004471
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An Adapting Auditory-motor Feedback Loop Can Contribute to Generating Vocal Repetition

Abstract: Consecutive repetition of actions is common in behavioral sequences. Although integration of sensory feedback with internal motor programs is important for sequence generation, if and how feedback contributes to repetitive actions is poorly understood. Here we study how auditory feedback contributes to generating repetitive syllable sequences in songbirds. We propose that auditory signals provide positive feedback to ongoing motor commands, but this influence decays as feedback weakens from response adaptation… Show more

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Cited by 24 publications
(55 citation statements)
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“…. → HVC) (45), and activation due to sensory feedback (29,35,46). Our observation that the dynamics of poststimulus activity were slowed by ∼10 ms relative to the expected timing of song [for both temporal tuning (Fig.…”
Section: Uncertainty Of Produced Sequences Modulates the Degree To Whichmentioning
confidence: 75%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…. → HVC) (45), and activation due to sensory feedback (29,35,46). Our observation that the dynamics of poststimulus activity were slowed by ∼10 ms relative to the expected timing of song [for both temporal tuning (Fig.…”
Section: Uncertainty Of Produced Sequences Modulates the Degree To Whichmentioning
confidence: 75%
“…Acute electrophysiology procedures, as previously described (42), were performed in accordance with established animal care protocols approved by the University of California, San Francisco, Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee. Birds used in this study also contributed data to other studies (42,46,50). See SI Materials and Methods for further details.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although further refinements of our technique, such as testing of other delay magnitudes, might reveal such a difference, it is also possible that these two forms of variable sequencing (branch points and repeated syllables) differ in their reliance on the acoustic structure of auditory feedback (Wittenbach et al, 2015). Future studies could examine this possibility by investigating the effects of sensory perturbations on behavior and neural activity during vocal production.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One neuron's activity was specific to a single context (Figure 4d ROI 10. c.f. as in 25 ) and the other three were active in multiple contexts (Figure 4d, ROIs 24,29,31). The phrase during which these cells were recorded precedes a complex transition and the type of the preceding phrase poorly predicts the transition outcome (right bar in Figure 4e, 0.08 out of 1 bit, bootstrapped mutual information estimate, methods).…”
Section: Jointly-recorded Cells Predict Behavior Prior To a Complex Tmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…15% had 1 st order correlations where activity during one phrase depends on the identity of an adjacent phrase, and 5.6% had ≥2 nd order relations (Figure 2d, Supplementary Figure 2 These sequence dependencies could potentially be explained by other factors inherent to the song that may be more predictive of phrase sequence than HVC activity. For example, transition probabilities following a given phrase could potentially depend on the phrase duration 1 , on the onset and offset timing of previous phrases, and on the global time since the start of the songimplicating processes such as neuromodulator tone, temperature buildup, or slow adaptation to auditory feedback [28][29][30][31][32][33] (c.f. Supplementary Figure 2 -7a,b, Supplementary Figure 2 -8).…”
Section: Activity Of Some Hvc Cells Reflect Long-range Sequence Informentioning
confidence: 99%