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Experience with Adults Shapes Multisensory Representation of Social Familiarity in the Brain of a Songbird

Social animals learn to perceive their social environment, and their social skills and preferences are thought to emerge from greater exposure to and hence familiarity with some social signals rather than others. Familiarity appears to be tightly linked to multisensory integration. The ability to di...

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Autores principales: George, Isabelle, Cousillas, Hugo, Richard, Jean-Pierre, Hausberger, Martine
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3378612/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22723887
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0038764
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author George, Isabelle
Cousillas, Hugo
Richard, Jean-Pierre
Hausberger, Martine
author_facet George, Isabelle
Cousillas, Hugo
Richard, Jean-Pierre
Hausberger, Martine
author_sort George, Isabelle
collection PubMed
description Social animals learn to perceive their social environment, and their social skills and preferences are thought to emerge from greater exposure to and hence familiarity with some social signals rather than others. Familiarity appears to be tightly linked to multisensory integration. The ability to differentiate and categorize familiar and unfamiliar individuals and to build a multisensory representation of known individuals emerges from successive social interactions, in particular with adult, experienced models. In different species, adults have been shown to shape the social behavior of young by promoting selective attention to multisensory cues. The question of what representation of known conspecifics adult-deprived animals may build therefore arises. Here we show that starlings raised with no experience with adults fail to develop a multisensory representation of familiar and unfamiliar starlings. Electrophysiological recordings of neuronal activity throughout the primary auditory area of these birds, while they were exposed to audio-only or audiovisual familiar and unfamiliar cues, showed that visual stimuli did, as in wild-caught starlings, modulate auditory responses but that, unlike what was observed in wild-caught birds, this modulation was not influenced by familiarity. Thus, adult-deprived starlings seem to fail to discriminate between familiar and unfamiliar individuals. This suggests that adults may shape multisensory representation of known individuals in the brain, possibly by focusing the young’s attention on relevant, multisensory cues. Multisensory stimulation by experienced, adult models may thus be ubiquitously important for the development of social skills (and of the neural properties underlying such skills) in a variety of species.
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spelling pubmed-33786122012-06-21 Experience with Adults Shapes Multisensory Representation of Social Familiarity in the Brain of a Songbird George, Isabelle Cousillas, Hugo Richard, Jean-Pierre Hausberger, Martine PLoS One Research Article Social animals learn to perceive their social environment, and their social skills and preferences are thought to emerge from greater exposure to and hence familiarity with some social signals rather than others. Familiarity appears to be tightly linked to multisensory integration. The ability to differentiate and categorize familiar and unfamiliar individuals and to build a multisensory representation of known individuals emerges from successive social interactions, in particular with adult, experienced models. In different species, adults have been shown to shape the social behavior of young by promoting selective attention to multisensory cues. The question of what representation of known conspecifics adult-deprived animals may build therefore arises. Here we show that starlings raised with no experience with adults fail to develop a multisensory representation of familiar and unfamiliar starlings. Electrophysiological recordings of neuronal activity throughout the primary auditory area of these birds, while they were exposed to audio-only or audiovisual familiar and unfamiliar cues, showed that visual stimuli did, as in wild-caught starlings, modulate auditory responses but that, unlike what was observed in wild-caught birds, this modulation was not influenced by familiarity. Thus, adult-deprived starlings seem to fail to discriminate between familiar and unfamiliar individuals. This suggests that adults may shape multisensory representation of known individuals in the brain, possibly by focusing the young’s attention on relevant, multisensory cues. Multisensory stimulation by experienced, adult models may thus be ubiquitously important for the development of social skills (and of the neural properties underlying such skills) in a variety of species. Public Library of Science 2012-06-19 /pmc/articles/PMC3378612/ /pubmed/22723887 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0038764 Text en George et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
George, Isabelle
Cousillas, Hugo
Richard, Jean-Pierre
Hausberger, Martine
Experience with Adults Shapes Multisensory Representation of Social Familiarity in the Brain of a Songbird
title Experience with Adults Shapes Multisensory Representation of Social Familiarity in the Brain of a Songbird
title_full Experience with Adults Shapes Multisensory Representation of Social Familiarity in the Brain of a Songbird
title_fullStr Experience with Adults Shapes Multisensory Representation of Social Familiarity in the Brain of a Songbird
title_full_unstemmed Experience with Adults Shapes Multisensory Representation of Social Familiarity in the Brain of a Songbird
title_short Experience with Adults Shapes Multisensory Representation of Social Familiarity in the Brain of a Songbird
title_sort experience with adults shapes multisensory representation of social familiarity in the brain of a songbird
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3378612/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22723887
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0038764
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