*Is that song sexy or just so-so?* **

*Why is your mate's rendition of Marvin Gaye's "Let's Get it On" cute and
sexy sometimes and so annoying at other times? A songbird study conducted by
Emory University sheds new light on this question, showing that a change in
hormone levels may alter the way we perceive social cues by altering a
system of brain nuclei, common to all vertebrates, called the "social
behavior network."
*
"Social behaviors such as courtship, parenting and aggression depend
primarily on two factors: a social signal to trigger the behavior, and a
hormonal milieu that facilitates or permits it," says Emory neuroscientist
Donna Maney, who led the study. "Our results demonstrate a possible neural
mechanism by which hormones may alter the processing of these signals and
affect social decision-making."

Maney's research examines how genes, hormones and the environment interact
to affect the brain, using songbirds as a model. Her work helps provide an
understanding of the basic principles underlying brain structure and
function common to many species, including humans.

Maney led a previous study on white-throated sparrows that suggested
hormones may modulate the way the auditory system processes courtship
signals. The new study (currently online), to be published in the Nov. 10
edition of the *Journal of Comparative Neurology, *expands on that research,
tracking and quantifying the effects of hormones across nine different nodes
of the brain's social behavior network.

The research group treated female white-throated sparrows with estrogen, to
mimic the levels seen during the breeding season, and compared them with
females that had low, non-breeding levels of estrogen. The birds listened to
recordings of either male white-throated sparrow song (a courtship signal
that should command the attention of breeding females) or synthetic beeps
(which should be pretty boring for all the females). The researchers then
used a marker of new protein synthesis to map and quantify the activity in
the social behavior network that was induced specifically by song.

Across most of the network, song-specific neural responses were higher in
the "breeding" females than the "non-breeding" ones. But the effects of
estrogen were not identical in every region. "If every node in the network
just responded more in the presence of estrogen, then we'd conclude that
estrogen acts as an on-off switch," Maney says. "But what we're seeing is
more complicated than that. Some activity goes up with esdtrogen, and some
goes down. We are seeing how estrogen changes the big picture as the brain
processes social information."

The findings suggest that the perceived meaning of a stimulus may be related
to the activity in the entire social behavior network, rather than a single
region of the brain. "The same neural mechanism may be operating in humans,"
Maney says. "In women, preferences for male faces, voices, body odors and
behavior change over the course of the menstrual cycle as estrogen levels
rise and fall. Our work with these songbirds shows a possible neural basis
for those changes."

Source: Emory University
http://www.physorg.com/news141318654.html
Posted by
Robert Karl Stonjek
 

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