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Mobilization of soil phosphate after 8 years of warming is linked to plant phosphorus-acquisition strategies in an alpine meadow on the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau 期刊论文
Global Change Biology, 2021
作者:  Jun Zhou;  Xiao-Long Li;  Fei Peng;  Chengyang Li;  Chimin Lai;  Quangang You;  Xian Xue;  Yanhong Wu;  Hongyang Sun;  Yang Chen;  Hongtao Zhong;  Hans Lambers
收藏  |  浏览/下载:12/0  |  提交时间:2021/10/22
Hidden neural states underlie canary song syntax 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020
作者:  Bao, Han;  Duan, Junlei;  Jin, Shenchao;  Lu, Xingda;  Li, Pengxiong;  Qu, Weizhi;  Wang, Mingfeng;  Novikova, Irina;  Mikhailov, Eugeniy E.;  Zhao, Kai-Feng;  Molmer, Klaus;  Shen, Heng;  Xiao, Yanhong
收藏  |  浏览/下载:10/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

Neurons in the canary premotor cortex homologue encode past song phrases and transitions, carrying information relevant to future choice of phrases as '  hidden states'  during song.


Coordinated skills such as speech or dance involve sequences of actions that follow syntactic rules in which transitions between elements depend on the identities and order of past actions. Canary songs consist of repeated syllables called phrases, and the ordering of these phrases follows long-range rules(1)in which the choice of what to sing depends on the song structure many seconds prior. The neural substrates that support these long-range correlations are unknown. Here, using miniature head-mounted microscopes and cell-type-specific genetic tools, we observed neural activity in the premotor nucleus HVC(2-4)as canaries explored various phrase sequences in their repertoire. We identified neurons that encode past transitions, extending over four phrases and spanning up to four seconds and forty syllables. These neurons preferentially encode past actions rather than future actions, can reflect more than one song history, and are active mostly during the rare phrases that involve history-dependent transitions in song. These findings demonstrate that the dynamics of HVC include '  hidden states'  that are not reflected in ongoing behaviour but rather carry information about prior actions. These states provide a possible substrate for the control of syntax transitions governed by long-range rules.