(Press-News.org) VANCOUVER, Wash.—Scientists have long thought that mice might serve as a model for how humans learn to vocalize. But new research led by scientists at Washington State University-Vancouver has found that, unlike humans and songbirds, mice do not learn how to vocalize.
But the results, published in the current Journal of Neuroscience, point the way to a more finely focused, genetic tool for teasing out the mysteries of speech and its disorders.
To see if mice learn to vocalize, WSU neurophysiologist Christine Portfors took more than a dozen male mice and destroyed their ears' hair cells. The cells convert sound waves into the electrical signals processed by the brain, making hearing possible.
The deaf mice were then raised with hearing mice in a normal social environment.
Portfors and her fellow researchers, including WSU graduate student Elena Mahrt, used males because they are particularly exuberant vocalizers in the presence of females.
"We can elicit vocalization behavior in males really easily by just putting them with a female," Portfors said, "and they vocalize like crazy."
And it turned out that it didn't matter if the mouse was deaf or not. The researchers catalogued essentially the same suite of ultrasonic sounds from both the deaf and hearing mice.
"It means that they don't need to hear to be able to produce their sounds, their vocalizations," Portfors said. "…Basically, they don't need to hear themselves. They don't need auditory feedback. They don't need to learn."
The finding means mice are out as a model to study vocal learning. However, scientists can now focus on the mouse to learn the genetic mechanism behind communications disorders.
"If you don't have learning as a variable, you can look at the genetic control of these things," Portfors said. "You can look at the genetic control of the output of the signal. It's not messed up by an animal that's been in a particular learning situation."
INFORMATION:
Portfors and Mahrt did their research in collaboration with scientists at the University of Washington. The study was funded by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute for Deafness and Communications Disorders.
Mice show innate ability to vocalize
Deaf or not, courting male mice make same sounds
2013-03-27
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Rural cancer care may be closer than you think
2013-03-27
Research from the University of Iowa suggests that cancer care is more accessible in rural areas than thought, and this increased accessibility should be considered as changes are made in the health care system under the Affordable Care Act.
Thomas Gruca, professor of marketing in the Tippie College of Business and study co-author, found that significant portions of Iowa's population are, indeed, an excessive distance from full-service cancer care centers located in larger cities like Des Moines, Omaha/Council Bluffs, or Davenport. But his study finds that number drops ...
Youth with type 1 diabetes may suffer health risks when transitioning from pediatric to adult care
2013-03-27
AURORA, Colo. (March 26, 2013) Adolescent type 1 diabetes patients face greater risk for heart attacks, strokes, blindness and kidney failure later in life if their transition from pediatric to adult care is not carefully managed, two CU researchers have found. The estimated median age at transition to adult care was 20.1 years and 77 percent of individuals with type 1 diabetes had left pediatric care by age 21. The study suggests that without support, they were 2.5 times more likely to have high blood glucose levels when transitioning from pediatric to adult care
The ...
Wastewater injection spurred biggest earthquake yet, says study
2013-03-27
A new study in the journal Geology is the latest to tie a string of unusual earthquakes, in this case, in central Oklahoma, to the injection of wastewater deep underground. Researchers now say that the magnitude 5.7 earthquake near Prague, Okla., on Nov. 6, 2011, may also be the largest ever linked to wastewater injection. Felt as far off as Milwaukee, more than 800 miles away, the quake—the biggest ever recorded in Oklahoma--destroyed 14 homes, buckled a federal highway and left two people injured. Small earthquakes continue to be recorded in the area. The study appeared ...
Protein-rich breakfasts prevent unhealthy snacking in the evening
2013-03-27
COLUMBIA, Mo. – Breakfast might be the most important meal of the day, but up to 60 percent of American young people consistently skip it. Now, Heather Leidy, an assistant professor in the Department of Nutrition and Exercise Physiology, says eating a breakfast rich in protein significantly improves appetite control and reduces unhealthy snacking on high-fat or high-sugar foods in the evening, which could help improve the diets of more than 25 million overweight or obese young adults in the U.S.
Leidy is the first to examine the impact of breakfast consumption on daily ...
Researchers build functional ovarian tissue in lab
2013-03-27
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. – March 26, 2013 – A proof-of-concept study suggests the possibility of engineering artificial ovaries in the lab to provide a more natural option for hormone replacement therapy for women. In Biomaterials, a team from Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center's Institute for Regenerative Medicine report that in the laboratory setting, engineered ovaries showed sustained release of the sex hormones estrogen and progesterone.
Although there are medications that can compensate for the loss of female sex hormone production, the drugs are often not recommended ...
Notre Dame researchers scoring a win-win with novel set of concussion diagnostic tools
2013-03-27
From Junior Seau, former San Diego Chargers linebacker, to Dave Duerson, former Chicago Bears safety — who both committed suicide as a result of chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), traumatic brain injuries (TBIs) have been making gruesome headlines at an alarming rate. In the United States alone, TBIs account for an estimated 1.6 - 3.8 million sports injuries every year, with approximately 300,000 of those being diagnosed among young, nonprofessional athletes. But TBIs are not confined to sports; they are also considered a signature wound among soldiers of the Iraq ...
Young women do not want to run for office
2013-03-27
Washington, D.C. (March 26, 2013) – Despite some very high-profile female candidates and elected officials, and what looks like a changing landscape of U.S. politics, a new study conducted by American University professor and director of its Women and Politics Institute Jennifer L. Lawless and Richard L. Fox (Loyola Marymount University) reveals that young women are less likely than young men ever to have considered running for office, to express interest in a candidacy at some point in the future, or to consider elective office a desirable profession.
In their new ...
Simulations uncover obstacle to harnessing laser-driven fusion
2013-03-27
A once-promising approach for using next-generation, ultra-intense lasers to help deliver commercially viable fusion energy has been brought into serious question by new experimental results and first-of-a-kind simulations of laser-plasma interaction.
Researchers at The Ohio State University are evaluating a two-stage process in which a pellet of fusion fuel is first crushed by lasers on all sides, shrinking the pellet to dozens of times its original size, followed by an ultra-intense burst of laser light to ignite a chain reaction. This two-stage approach is called Fast ...
Federally-funded research and development centers spend $17.8 billion in fiscal year 2011
2013-03-27
The nation's 40 federally-funded research and development centers (FFRDCs) spent $17.8 billion on research and development (R&D) in fiscal year (FY) 2011, according to a recent report from the National Science Foundation. More than $850 million of the total was supplied by funds from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009.
FFRDCs are privately operated R&D organizations financed by the federal government. They include national labs and observatories. Federal funding accounted for 97.6 percent, or $17.4 billion, of the FFRDCs' total expenditures in FY 2011. ...
Climate change likely to worsen threat of diarrheal disease in Botswana, arid African countries
2013-03-27
In a National Science Foundation funded study, Kathleen Alexander, an associate professor of wildlife at Virginia Tech, found that climate drives a large part of diarrheal disease and increases the threat of climate change for vulnerable communities.
The only study of its kind in Sub-Saharan Africa is based on three decades of historical data and has important implications for arid countries around the world struggling with poverty and increasing health challenges.
Alexander, a veterinarian, teaches in Virginia Tech's College of Natural Resources and Environment and ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
ICCUB astronomers lead the most ambitious study of runaway massive stars in the Milky Way
Artificial Intelligence can generate a feeling of intimacy
Antidepressants not associated with serious complications from TBI
Evasive butterfly mimicry reveals a supercharged biodiversity feedback loop
Hearing angry or happy human voices is linked to changes in dogs’ balance
Microplastics are found in a third of surveyed fish off the coasts of remote Pacific Islands
De-stigmatizing self-reported data in health care research
US individuals traveling from strongly blue or red US counties may favor everyday travel to like-minded destinations
Study reveals how superionic state enables long-term water storage in Earth's interior
AI machine learning can optimize patient risk assessments
Efficacy of immunosuppressive regimens for survival of stem cell-derived grafts
Glowing bacterial sensors detect gut illness in mice before symptoms emerge
GLP-1 RAs and prior major adverse limb events in patients with diabetes
Life-course psychosocial stress and risk of dementia and stroke in middle-aged and older adults
Cells have a built-in capacity limit for copying DNA, and it could impact cancer treatment
Study finds longer hospital stays and higher readmissions for young adults with complex childhood conditions
Study maps how varied genetic forms of autism lead to common features
New chip-sized, energy-efficient optical amplifier can intensify light 100 times
New light-based platform sets the stage for future quantum supercomputers
Pesticides significantly affect soil life and biodiversity
Corals sleep like us, but their symbiosis does not rest
Huayuan biota decodes Earth’s first Phanerozoic mass extinction
Beyond Polymers: New state-of-the-art 3D micro and nanofabrication technique overcomes material limitations
New platform could develop vaccines faster than ever before
TF-rs1049296 C>T variant modifies the association between hepatic iron stores and liver fibrosis in metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease
ASH publishes clinical practice guidelines on diagnosis of light chain amyloidosis
SLAS receives grant from Alfred P. Sloan Foundation to develop lab automation educational guidelines
Serum interleukin-8 for differentiating invasive pulmonary aspergillosis from bacterial pneumonia in patients with HBV-associated acute-on-chronic liver failure
CIIS and the Kinsey Institute present "Desire on the Couch," an exhibition examining psychology and sexuality
MRI scan breakthrough could spare thousands of heart patients from risky invasive tests
[Press-News.org] Mice show innate ability to vocalizeDeaf or not, courting male mice make same sounds