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What birds can teach us about social learning

What birds can teach us about social learning
An adult zebra finch tutor (right) and young pupil (left). Credit: Masashi Tanaka, 2025

How does a bird learn its birdsong? Tomoko Fujii and Masashi Tanaka, from Waseda University, explored what drives a zebra finch to approach and imitate other zebra finches to learn its birdsong in a new JNeurosci paper.

The researchers explored song learning in young male zebra finches as they interacted with "tutor" adults that already knew their birdsongs. Young zebra finches preferably approached tutors that sang longer but less frequently.

Fujii and Tanaka next probed the role of a brain region traditionally linked to emotions in mammals (the amygdala) in this song-learning process. To examine the role of the amygdala, the researchers removed it from the young zebra finches.

While the loss of this brain region did not hinder song imitation, tutor selection became more unpredictable as birds pursued tutors less discerningly. Tracing in the brain further confirmed that the doesn't necessarily drive song control and learning, but may play a role in socially selective, imitative behavior, according to the authors.

More information: Amygdala Regulates Social Motivation for Selective Vocal Imitation in Zebra Finches, JNeurosci (2025).

Journal information: Journal of Neuroscience

Citation: What birds can teach us about social learning (2025, May 26) retrieved 22 September 2025 from /news/2025-05-birds-social.html
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