Vocal learning/Related Articles: Difference between revisions
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{{r|Language (general)|Language}} | {{r|Language (general)|Language}} | ||
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{{r|Language evolution}} | {{r|Language evolution}} | ||
{{r|FOXP2}} | {{r|FOXP2}} | ||
==Articles related by keyphrases (Bot populated)== | |||
{{r|Transposon}} | |||
{{r|Energostatic hypothesis}} | |||
{{r|Hawaiian Creole}} | |||
{{r|Myxococcus xanthus}} |
Latest revision as of 07:00, 6 November 2024
- See also changes related to Vocal learning, or pages that link to Vocal learning or to this page or whose text contains "Vocal learning".
Parent topics
- Brain [r]: The core unit of a central nervous system. [e]
- Learning [r]: The process of structuring new knowledge. [e]
- Cognition [r]: The central nervous system's processing of information relevant to interacting with itself and its internal and external environment. [e]
- Animal communication [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Social learning [r]: Add brief definition or description
Subtopics
- Babbling [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Birdsong [r]: Vocalizations that birds learn. [e]
- Language [r]: A type of communication system, commonly used in linguistics, computer science and other fields to refer to different systems, including 'natural language' in humans, programming languages run on computers, and so on. [e]
- Music [r]: The art of structuring time by combining sound and silence into rhythm, harmonies and melodies. [e]
- Spoken language [r]: An example of language produced using some of the articulatory organs, e.g. the mouth, vocal folds or lungs, or intended for production by these organs; alternatively, the entire act of communicating verbally - what people mean or intend, the words they use, their accent, intonation and so on. [e]
- Subsong [r]: The songs produced by adolescent songbirds, similar to the babbling stage in human language development. [e]
- Entrainment (biomusicology) [r]: The synchronization of different individual organisms to an external rhythm, usually in the framework of social interactions. [e]
- Music psychology [r]: The study of how, when, where and why people engage in music and dance. [e]
- Psycholinguistics [r]: Study of the psychological and neurobiological factors that enable humans to acquire, use, comprehend and produce language. [e]
- Evolutionary psychology [r]: The comparative study of the nervous system and its relation to behaviour across species. [e]
- Language evolution [r]: Please do not use this term in your topic list, because there is no single article for it. Please substitute a more precise term. See Language evolution (disambiguation) for a list of available, more precise, topics. Please add a new usage if needed.
- FOXP2 [r]: A regulatory gene on human chromosome 7, involved in language disorders. [e]
- Transposon [r]: Blocks of conserved DNA that can occasionally move to different positions within the chromosomes of a cell. [e]
- Energostatic hypothesis [r]: The theory that appetite is regulated by the availability of energy for the brain. [e]
- Hawaiian Creole [r]: Creole language (created through children acquiring a pidgin as their first language and thereby making it complex) popularly known as Hawaiian 'Pidgin', with vocabulary largely from English; spoken in the U.S. state of Hawaii, it replaced an earlier pidgin based on the Hawaiian language. [e]
- Myxococcus xanthus [r]: Rod shaped, Gram-negative bacteria that exists as a self-organized, predatory, saprotrophic, single-species biofilm called a swarm. [e]