Comparative approaches to the avian song system.
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] A. Arnold,et al. Effects of androgens on volumes of sexually dimorphic brain regions in the zebra finch , 1980, Brain Research.
[2] D Margoliash,et al. Distributed representation in the song system of oscines: evolutionary implications and functional consequences. , 1994, Brain, behavior and evolution.
[3] Behavioural Significance of Duet Interactions: Cues From Antiphonal Duetting Between Males (Cossypha Heuglini H.) , 1983 .
[4] P. Deviche,et al. Androgen control of vocal control region volumes in a wild migratory songbird (Junco hyemalis) is region and possibly age dependent. , 1997, Journal of neurobiology.
[5] A. Arnold,et al. Sexual dimorphism in vocal control areas of the songbird brain. , 1976, Science.
[6] D. Kroodsma. Reproductive Development in a Female Songbird: Differential Stimulation by Quality of Male Song , 1976, Science.
[7] J. Wingfield,et al. The "Challenge Hypothesis": Theoretical Implications for Patterns of Testosterone Secretion, Mating Systems, and Breeding Strategies , 1990, The American Naturalist.
[8] S. Bottjer,et al. Hormone-induced changes in identified cell populations of the higher vocal center in male canaries. , 1993, Journal of neurobiology.
[9] Eliot A. Brenowitz,et al. The effects of systemic androgen treatment on androgen accumulation in song control regions of the adult female canary brain. , 1990, Journal of neurobiology.
[10] Eliot A. Brenowitz,et al. Seasonal Changes in Testosterone, Neural Attributes of Song Control Nuclei, and Song Structure in Wild Songbirds , 1997, The Journal of Neuroscience.
[11] F. Nottebohm,et al. Brain space for a learned task , 1981, Brain Research.
[12] Eliot A. Brenowitz,et al. Seasonal changes in avian song nuclei without seasonal changes in song repertoire , 1991, The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience.
[13] E. Nordeen,et al. Anatomical and synaptic substrates for avian song learning. , 1997, Journal of neurobiology.
[14] Eliot A. Brenowitz,et al. Lack of sexual dimorphism in steroid accumulation in vocal control brain regions of duetting song birds , 1985, Brain Research.
[15] Eliot A. Brenowitz,et al. Steroid accumulation in song nuclei of a sexually dimorphic duetting bird, the rufous and white wren. , 1996, Journal of neurobiology.
[16] Eliot A. Brenowitz,et al. Accumulation of estrogen in a vocal control brain region of a duetting song bird , 1989, Brain Research.
[17] A. Arnold,et al. Sexual Difference in Pattern of Hormone Accumulation in the Brain of a Songbird , 1979, Science.
[18] T. Devoogd,et al. White-throated sparrow morphs that differ in song production rate also differ in the anatomy of some song-related brain areas. , 1995, Journal of neurobiology.
[19] J. Wingfield,et al. Hormonal and behavioural responses to simulated territorial intrusion in the cooperatively breeding white-browed sparrow weaver, Plocepasser mahali , 1993, Animal Behaviour.
[20] R. N. Levin. Song behaviour and reproductive strategies in a duetting wren, Thryothorus nigricapillus : I. Removal experiments , 1996, Animal Behaviour.
[21] Fernando Nottebohm,et al. Testosterone triggers growth of brain vocal control nuclei in adult female canaries , 1980, Brain Research.
[22] M. Gahr,et al. Delineation of a brain nucleus: Comparisons of cytochemical, hodological, and cytoarchitectural views of the song control nucleus HVC of the adult canary , 1990, The Journal of comparative neurology.
[23] R. Dooling,et al. Effects of deafening on the contact call of the budgerigar, Melopsittacus undulatus , 1987, Animal Behaviour.
[24] D Margoliash,et al. Functional organization of forebrain pathways for song production and perception. , 1997, Journal of neurobiology.
[25] Stephen D. Shea,et al. Functional Anatomy of Forebrain Vocal Control Pathways in the Budgerigar (Melopsittacus undulatus) a , 1997, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.
[26] Age- and behavior-related variation in volumes of song control nuclei in male European starlings. , 1996, Journal of neurobiology.
[27] W. Searcy. Song repertoire and mate choice in birds , 1992 .
[28] F. Nottebohm,et al. Role of gender, season, and familiarity in discrimination of conspecific song by zebra finches (Taeniopygia guttata). , 1992, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[29] E. Nordeen,et al. Estrogen establishes sex differences in androgen accumulation in zebra finch brain , 1986, The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience.
[30] A. Arnold,et al. Sexual differentiation of the zebra finch song system: positive evidence, negative evidence, null hypotheses, and a paradigm shift. , 1997, Journal of neurobiology.
[31] B. Schlinger. Sex steroids and their actions on the birdsong system. , 1997, Journal of neurobiology.
[32] S. Healy,et al. Relations between song repertoire size and the volume of brain nuclei related to song: comparative evolutionary analyses amongst oscine birds , 1993, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences.
[33] F. Nottebohm,et al. Bilateral organization of the vocal control pathway in the budgerigar, Melopsittacus undulatus , 1981, The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience.
[34] H. Karten,et al. A stereotaxic atlas of the brain of the pigeon (Columba livia) , 1967 .
[35] S. Bottjer,et al. Testosterone and the incidence of hormone target cells in song-control nuclei of adult canaries. , 1991, Journal of neurobiology.
[36] Eliot A. Brenowitz,et al. Neural correlates of female song in tropical duetting birds , 1985, Brain Research.
[37] D. Kroodsma,et al. Differences in Repertoire Size, Singing Behavior, and Associated Neuroanatomy Among Marsh Wren Populations Have a Genetic Basis , 1985 .
[38] Eliot A. Brenowitz,et al. Seasonal changes in the size of the avian song control nucleus HVC defined by multiple histological markers , 1997, The Journal of comparative neurology.
[39] W. Gunn,et al. VARIATION IN WHITE-THROATED SPARROW SONGS , 1965 .
[40] F. Nottebohm. A brain for all seasons: cyclical anatomical changes in song control nuclei of the canary brain. , 1981, Science.
[41] Eliot A. Brenowitz. Evolution of the vocal control system in the avian brain , 1991 .
[42] A. Arnold. The effects of castration and androgen replacement on song, courtship, and aggression in zebra finches (Poephila guttata). , 1975, The Journal of experimental zoology.
[43] D Margoliash,et al. An introduction to birdsong and the avian song system. , 1997, Journal of neurobiology.
[44] Eliot A. Brenowitz,et al. Roles of photoperiod and testosterone in seasonal plasticity of the avian song control system. , 1997, Journal of neurobiology.
[45] S. Bottjer,et al. Differential estrogen accumulation among populations of projection neurons in the higher vocal center of male canaries. , 1995, Journal of neurobiology.
[46] M. Gahr,et al. Estrogen receptors in the avian brain: Survey reveals general distribution and forebrain areas unique to songbirds , 1993, The Journal of comparative neurology.
[47] Burt L. Monroe,et al. A Classification of the Living Birds of the World Based on Dna-Dna Hybridization Studies , 1988 .
[48] Fernando Nottebohm,et al. The Origins of Vocal Learning , 1972, The American Naturalist.
[49] F. Nottebohm,et al. Birth of projection neurons in adult avian brain may be related to perceptual or motor learning. , 1990, Science.
[50] F. Nottebohm,et al. Production and survival of projection neurons in a forebrain vocal center of adult male canaries , 1991, The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience.
[51] S. Bottjer,et al. Castration and antisteroid treatment impair vocal learning in male zebra finches. , 1992, Journal of neurobiology.
[52] Eliot A. Brenowitz,et al. Interspecific comparisons of the size of neural song control regions and song complexity in duetting birds: evolutionary implications , 1986, The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience.
[53] F. Nottebohm,et al. Developmental and seasonal changes in canary song and their relation to changes in the anatomy of song-control nuclei. , 1986, Behavioral and neural biology.
[54] J. Krebs,et al. Song repertoires and territory defence in the great tit , 1978, Nature.
[55] S. Brauth,et al. Distribution of choline acetyltransferase and acetylcholinesterase in vocal control nuclei of the budgerigar (Melopsittacus undulatus) , 1996, The Journal of comparative neurology.
[56] F. Nottebohm,et al. The life span of new neurons in a song control nucleus of the adult canary brain depends on time of year when these cells are born. , 1994, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[57] Donald E. Kroodsma,et al. Vocal Virtuosity in the Brown Thrasher , 1977 .
[58] C. Catchpole. Sexual Selection and the Evolution of Complex Songs Among European Warblers of the Genus Acr Ocephal Us , 1980 .
[59] S. Brauth,et al. Comparison of the effects of lesions in nucleus basalis and field 'L' on vocal learning and performance in the budgerigar (Melopsittacus undulatus). , 1994, Brain, behavior and evolution.
[60] E. Nordeen,et al. Estrogen accumulation in zebra finch song control nuclei: implications for sexual differentiation and adult activation of song behavior. , 1987, Journal of neurobiology.
[61] S. Bottjer,et al. Circuits, hormones, and learning: vocal behavior in songbirds. , 1997, Journal of neurobiology.
[62] A. Doupe,et al. Song- and order-selective neurons develop in the songbird anterior forebrain during vocal learning. , 1997, Journal of neurobiology.
[63] A. Álvarez-Buylla,et al. Birth, migration, incorporation, and death of vocal control neurons in adult songbirds. , 1997, Journal of neurobiology.
[64] Gregory F Ball,et al. Two histological markers reveal a similar photoperiodic difference in the volume of the high vocal center in male European starlings , 1995, The Journal of comparative neurology.
[65] C. Whaling,et al. Testosterone-induced shortening of the storage phase of song development in birds interferes with vocal learning. , 1995, Developmental psychobiology.
[66] Peter Marler,et al. The role of sex steroids in the acquisition and production of birdsong , 1988, Nature.
[67] M. Andersson,et al. SEXUAL SELECTION AND THE EVOLUTION OF SONG , 1986 .
[68] R. Raikow. Monophyly of the Passeriformes: Test of a Phylogenetic Hypothesis , 1982 .
[69] Masakazu Konishi,et al. Neuronal growth, atrophy and death in a sexually dimorphic song nucleus in the zebra finch brain , 1985, Nature.
[70] E. Nordeen,et al. Neuron loss and addition in developing zebra finch song nuclei are independent of auditory experience during song learning. , 1991, Journal of neurobiology.
[71] Eliot A. Brenowitz,et al. Seasonal changes in song nuclei and song behavior in Gambel's white-crowned sparrows. , 1995, Journal of neurobiology.
[72] Eliot A. Brenowitz,et al. Hormone accumulation in song regions of the canary brain. , 1992, Journal of neurobiology.
[73] G. Striedter,et al. The vocal control pathways in budgerigars differ from those in songbirds , 1994, The Journal of comparative neurology.
[74] J. Wild,et al. Neural pathways for the control of birdsong production. , 1997, Journal of neurobiology.
[75] R. Clower,et al. Song-related brain regions in the red-winged blackbird are affected by sex and season but not repertoire size. , 1989, Journal of neurobiology.
[76] Eliot A. Brenowitz,et al. Female marsh wrens do not provide evidence of anatomical specializations of song nuclei for perception of male song. , 1994, Journal of neurobiology.
[77] F. Nottebohm,et al. Population differences in complexity of a learned skill are correlated with the brain space involved. , 1984, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[78] Donald E. Kroodsma,et al. The Function(s) of Bird Song , 1991 .
[79] M. Gurney,et al. Hormonal control of cell form and number in the zebra finch song system , 1981, The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience.
[80] N. Saito,et al. Correlation between the size of song control nuclei and plumage color change in orange bishop birds , 1989, Neuroscience Letters.
[81] K. Yasukawa. Song repertoires in the red-winged blackbird (Agelaius phoeniceus): A test of the Beau Geste hypothesis , 1981, Animal Behaviour.
[82] M. Pagel,et al. The comparative method in evolutionary biology , 1991 .
[83] Eliot A. Brenowitz,et al. Brain space for learned song in birds develops independently of song learning , 1995, The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience.
[84] A. Arnold,et al. Sexual dimorphism and lack of seasonal changes in vocal control regions of the white-crowned sparrow brain , 1984, Brain Research.