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GENERATION GAP: When their perception
is altered (right), juvenile owls adapt quickly.
Adults learn in a more incremental fashion.
Linda Cicero
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with their heart-shaped white faces and mahogany
eyes, barn owls rank high in adorability. But it’s
their acute sight and hearing that captivate Eric Knudsen.
“They have a tremendous capacity for localizing sounds,” Knudsen
says about the creatures that are commonly called ghost
owls or spirit owls. “You never see them because they
only come out after dark. Then they take the place of
red-tailed hawks, hunting rodents and mice by starlight.”
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Courtesy Anne Knudsen
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Chair of
the neurobiology department at the School of Medicine,
Knudsen has been studying barn owls for more than 25 years.
Over the decades, he has altered their hearing with earplugs
and fitted them with glasses that skew their vision.
And
he’s
been amazed at how the birds have made adjustments and
continued to zero in on their prey with singular accuracy.
Understanding
how juvenile and adult owls’ brains function
has implications for rehabilitating humans after brain
injuries, such as those that result from strokes. “The
basic issue we’re concerned with is the mechanism of
learning—how
owls’ brains learn from experience,” Knudsen says. “You
can think of it like learning a foreign language when you’re
very young: if you’re re-exposed, you can pick it up
quickly. There’s something about early learning that
can leave traces in the brain.”
Knudsen and his graduate
students have monitored juvenile owls while playing them
sounds of squeaking or chewing or even
tiptoeing mice in the forest. They’ve found that the
8-month-old youngsters, who are constantly picking up new
skills and processing new information about their world, can
adjust
the neurological maps that guide them to the sounds. For
example, if a young owl is fitted with a pair of glasses that
shifts
everything in his field of vision to the right, he will
see objects to his left when he looks straight ahead. But within
several weeks, the bespectacled little bird will make an
adjustment,
shifting his head to the right to see what is directly
in front of him. Adult owls, by comparison, cannot make a similar
adjustment—unless
they were fitted with the prism spectacles as juveniles,
or unless the glasses are adjusted in small increments over
a
longer period of time. Bottom line: juvenile owls learn
in huge leaps, but adults have to take much smaller steps.
“One implication of the incremental trend is that if
you want to rehabilitate some capacity [lost to stroke], you
want
to assess what the person is capable of dealing with, and
gradually modify within that range,” Knudsen says. “You
don’t
want to try to reinstitute total capacity in one step.”
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