4.4 Article

The role of sex chromosomes and sex hormones in vocal learning systems

Journal

HORMONES AND BEHAVIOR
Volume 132, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2021.104978

Keywords

Vocal learning; Birdsong; Language; Sexual dimorphism; Sex hormones; Sex chromosome; Sex determination; Hypothalamus; Evolution; Functional genomics

Funding

  1. Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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Vocal learning is the ability to imitate and modify sounds, crucial for transmitting speech repertoires in humans and some birds with sexual dimorphism of this trait. Studies show subtle sexual dimorphism in vocal learning regions in humans, and an interplay between sex chromosomes and sex steroid hormones in the loss of vocal learning in females of some bird lineages.
Vocal learning is the ability to imitate and modify sounds through auditory experience, a rare trait found in only a few lineages of mammals and birds. It is a critical component of human spoken language, allowing us to verbally transmit speech repertoires and knowledge across generations. In many vocal learning species, the vocal learning trait is sexually dimorphic, where it is either limited to males or present in both sexes to different degrees. In humans, recent findings have revealed subtle sexual dimorphism in vocal learning/spoken language brain regions and some associated disorders. For songbirds, where the neural mechanisms of vocal learning have been well studied, vocal learning appears to have been present in both sexes at the origin of the lineage and was then independently lost in females of some subsequent lineages. This loss is associated with an interplay between sex chromosomes and sex steroid hormones. Even in species with little dimorphism, like humans, sex chromosomes and hormones still have some influence on learned vocalizations. Here we present a brief synthesis of these studies, in the context of sex determination broadly, and identify areas of needed investigation to further understand how sex chromosomes and sex steroid hormones help establish sexually dimorphic neural structures for vocal learning.

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