Posts tagged songbird

Posts tagged songbird
Researcher Finds Gender Differences In Seasonal Auditory Changes
Auditory systems differ between sexes in sparrows depending on the season, a Georgia State University neuroscientist has found. The work adds to our knowledge of how the parts of the nervous system, including that of humans, are able to change.
Megan Gall, a post-doctoral researcher with Georgia State’s Neuroscience Institute, tested the peripheral auditory systems of male and female house sparrows, comparing the hearing of each gender during non-breeding seasons and breeding seasons.
Gall measured frequency selectivity – the ability to tell sounds that are close in frequency apart, and temporal resolution, the ability to tell sounds apart that are very close together in time.
“We found that males have the same frequency selectivity and temporal resolution across breeding seasons,” Gall said. “In the fall, males and females aren’t different. But in the breeding season, females had better frequency selectivity, but this came at the expense of worse temporal resolution.”
The study was published in the Proceedings of The Royal Society B, a British scientific journal.
The difference shows “plasticity,” the ability to change, she said. Plasticity is an important concept in neuroscience, as scientists have increasingly been able to show that neurological systems have the ability to change.
Gall said the work shows, for the first time, that there’s seasonal plasticity in these properties in the periphery of the auditory system, the ear and the auditory nerve, not just inside the parts of the brain that control auditory function.
Similar changes happen in humans, she said. Women show different auditory sensitivities during the course of a menstrual cycle. “I always like to say that if your husband says he can’t hear you, it may be that he can’t. His auditory system is different than yours,” Gall said.
The changes might have evolved over time for different reasons, she said, with one reason being that it is harder for the body to maintain a certain kind of tissues involved in hearing.