Hormones, neural circuits, and vocal communication behaviors
- Date: Apr 9, 2024
- Time: 11:00 AM - 12:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
- Speaker: Luke Remage-Healey
- University of Massachussets
- Location: MPI BI Seewiesen
- Room: MPI BI Seewiesen, Haus 4, Seminarraum 4/0.07 und 4/0.08
- Host: Pepe Alcami
- Contact: jalcami@orn.mpg.de
The
functional connectivity of neural circuits is shifted dynamically by modulators
to allow many, flexible behavioral outputs from the same network. The idea that
steroid hormones can operate as genuine neuromodulators - synthesized by and
acting in brain circuits within minutes - has gained traction in recent years.
Evidence for brain steroid synthesis at synaptic terminals has converged with
evidence for the rapid actions of brain-derived steroids on neural circuits and
behavior. This talk will emphasize the role of neuro-estrogens as rapid
modulators of motor, sensorimotor, and auditory circuits and their accompanying
behaviors. It will draw primarily on studies of acoustic communication
behaviors in comparative model systems, including teleost fishes and songbirds.
The general principle emerging from this work is that the production of steroid
hormones within brain circuits can guide behavioral transitions over the course
of minutes. Steroids can therefore change the information content of neuronal
networks, and this perspective helps explain the substantial influence of
steroids on perception, learning and memory.