A BME Kognitív Tudományi Tanszék szeretettel vár mindenkit tanszéki
szemináriumsorozatának március 16-ai elo"adására:
*Olga **Fehér *
*Evolution of song culture in the zebra finch*
Date: April 4, 12:00-13:00
Location: Stoczek utca 2., St. ép, 320. 1111, Bp.
See the project Olga has been working on:
http://ofer.sci.ccny.cuny.edu/
For her related work see:
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v459/n7246/abs/nature07994.html
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v433/n7027/abs/nature03275.html
Abstract
Many aspects of human culture are cumulative: future generations build
on the knowledge gained by previous generations in shaping cultural
processes. Perhaps the most obvious example is technological
development, but other aspects of culture such as the visual arts, music
and language also share this cumulative quality. In the animal world, it
is widely accepted that some animal species have culture. However, the
extent to which animal culture is multi-generational and what cultural
evolutionary processes shape it is largely unknown. We used an oscine
songbird, the zebra finch, to show that wild-type song culture can
emerge de novo, over a few generations in controlled laboratory
environments. We created a situation in which rapid cultural evolution
allows us to observe it real-time and describe its process in detail.
When juvenile zebra finches are raised in isolation, they sing an
abnormal, isolate song which differs from the wild-type song sung by
wild or colony-raised zebra finches. After describing these differences
quantitatively, we used a recursive paradigm to train juveniles with
isolate tutors, then, upon reaching adulthood, these pupils trained a
new generation of juveniles and so on. We found that young zebra finches
learned their tutors' isolate songs, but in each learning generation,
they changed characteristics of the song in ways that made the song more
and more wild-type-like. In about 3-4 generations, the songs resembled
wild-type songs in both a one-on-one training paradigm and in an
isolated colony founded by an isolate male. By describing in detail the
rapid cultural process that we observed, we are able to draw conclusions
about the possible evolutionary mechanisms that could have accounted for it.