Recovery of pitch target requires practice.
(A) Two hypotheses on birds’ ability to recover a song target away from their current vocal output (green circles, motor states on the left, sensory states on the right, shading represents probabilities): Either they could recall the motor target and reactivate it without practice, or they could recall a sensory target plus the neural mapping (black arrows) required to transform it into a motor state. (B) WNm birds were first pitch-reinforced using white noise (WN), then muted, and subsequently unmuted. WN was delivered when the pitch of the target syllable was either below (as exemplified here) or above a threshold. Pitch recovery from the reinforced (R) state towards the baseline (B) target is evaluated in early (E, no practice) and late (L, with practice) analysis windows (all windows are time-aligned to the first 2 h of songs after withdrawal of reinforcement, E) and compared to recovery in unmuted control birds (WNC). (C) Syllable pitches (dots, red=reinforced syllables) of an example bird that while muted recovered only about 27% of pitch difference to baseline despite three spontaneous unmuting events (arrows). (D) Same bird, spectrograms of example song motifs from 5 epochs: during baseline (B), reinforcement (R) with WN (green bar), spontaneous unmuting (spont. unmut), and during permanent unmuting (early – E and late - L). (E) Example syllables from same 5 epochs. (F) Stack plot of pitch traces (pitch indicated by color, see color scale) of the first 40 targeted syllables in each epoch (‘reinforced’: only traces without WN are shown). (G)Average pitch traces from F), revealing a pitch increase during the pitch-measurement window (dashed black lines) and pitch recovery late after unmuting. (H)WNm birds (blue lines, N = 8) showed a normalized residual pitch (NRP) far from zero several days after reinforcement (circles indicate unmuting events, arrow shows bird from C) unlike WNC birds (gray lines, N = 18). Thin dashed lines indicate the two initial birds that were not given reinforcement-free singing experience before muting. (I) Violin plots of same data restricted to early and late analysis windows (***p < 0.001, *p < 0.05, two-tailed t-test of NRP = 0).