<code id='059EA240C5'></code><style id='059EA240C5'></style>
    • <acronym id='059EA240C5'></acronym>
      <center id='059EA240C5'><center id='059EA240C5'><tfoot id='059EA240C5'></tfoot></center><abbr id='059EA240C5'><dir id='059EA240C5'><tfoot id='059EA240C5'></tfoot><noframes id='059EA240C5'>

    • <optgroup id='059EA240C5'><strike id='059EA240C5'><sup id='059EA240C5'></sup></strike><code id='059EA240C5'></code></optgroup>
        1. <b id='059EA240C5'><label id='059EA240C5'><select id='059EA240C5'><dt id='059EA240C5'><span id='059EA240C5'></span></dt></select></label></b><u id='059EA240C5'></u>
          <i id='059EA240C5'><strike id='059EA240C5'><tt id='059EA240C5'><pre id='059EA240C5'></pre></tt></strike></i>

          leisure time

          leisure time

          author:comprehensive    Page View:3
          Zebra Finch
          Florida State University scientists are studying how male zebra finches learn to sing. Mohammad Abdullah/Creative Commons

          Scientists have long suspected songbirds might hold the secrets to better understanding how human learn to talk. Now several Florida-based researchers believe understanding how some birds sing could someday lead to answers about some human developmental learning disabilities.

          A team of Florida State University scientists — led by psychologist Rick Hyson, statistician Wei Wu, biomathematician Richard Bertram, and neuroanatomist Frank Johnson — have received an $800,000 National Science Foundation grant to study the brains of male zebra finches and how they learn to sing.

          advertisement

          Speaking by phone from his Tallahassee, Fla., office, Hyson told STAT the answer may have something to do with how electrical pulses pass through the songbird’s network of neurons in the brain — and how early-life experiences potentially change brain function. This interview has been condensed and edited for clarity.

          Unlock this article by subscribing to STAT+ and enjoy your first 30 days free!

          GET STARTED Log In

          explore

          Cancer drug shortages should be causing more outrage
          Cancer drug shortages should be causing more outrage

          DrugshortagesareagrowingproblemintheU.S.,andashortageoflivesavingcancerdrugsinparticularhasreachedcr

          read more
          The history of OxyContin, told through Purdue Pharma documents
          The history of OxyContin, told through Purdue Pharma documents

          AlexHogan/STATPIKEVILLE,Ky.—STAT’smultiyearlegalbattletounsealsecretPurduePharmafilesinaKentuckycour

          read more
          Drug repurposing or repositioning? The language matters
          Drug repurposing or repositioning? The language matters

          AdobeFindinganewmedicineisnevereasy.Butdevelopingtreatmentsforpatientswithrarediseases—conditionstha

          read more

          Mom launches Girl Scout troop for LGBTQ youth in Texas

          2:16AnewGirlScouttroopspecificallyforLGBTQ+youthhaskickedoffintheFortWorth,Texasarea.Here,someofthen