

Singing Mice and Brain Chemistry 188
Shirlockc writes "The Public Library of Science has a research article on how male mice actually sing in the presence of females. They actually posted some of the audios adjusted for human ears as these songs are ultrasonic. The authors are comparing these warbles to bird songs. The songs are quite complex so do the mice learn them and/or improve on them? This can be a potential model for investigating how brain chemistry works during learning."
Hitchhiker's Guide to The Galaxy (Score:5, Funny)
Uncover the conspiracy! (Score:1)
but seriously (Score:5, Funny)
Why would natural selection push male mice to develop this talent?
I sure don't know, but just for amusement I'll propose something along the lines of the OP's comment: suppose we argue an important characteristic of mice is that they are damn clever for their size. Seems likely they're a lot smarter, for example, than snakes or lizards or even birds of equivalent mass. Maybe they need smarts to succeed at a lifetime of scampering and hiding and thieving bits of food from larger predators.
If this is so, maybe it makes sense that the smartest males want to advertise their intelligence, and females are interested in listening to those ads, so that they can pick out good genes for the pups.
Now, clearly it takes brains to learn a complex song, spice it up with a couple of individual flourishes, and memorize it. So maybe what these mice fellas are doing by singing is advertising how smart they are. And maybe the girl mice by listening in are evaluating the sexy braininess of boy mice as it's expressed in their composition.
It would be, in essence, the auditory equivalent of posting clever comments on
Re:but seriously (Score:2)
Re:but seriously (Score:2)
But then again there are syllables and phrases in music, aren't there? I may be completely wrong. To me the "s
Re:but seriously (Score:2)
Re:but seriously (Score:3, Informative)
I think you're misunderstanding how natural selection works if you assume that everything that developers (whether it's a physical feature or a character trait or something) has to have a direct advantage. It doesn't - it's also possible that it just developed as the secondary effect of some underlying cause.
Case in point: the genitals of female spotted hyenas. (Look it up if you want details - suffice to say that it's not possible to v
the Sherlock Holmes rule (Score:2)
Just because you have an explanation doesn't mean you have the explanation.
I call it the SH rule because, when you read "Sherlock Holmes" stories, you always read about these brilliant, very long chains of logic by which Holmes figures out stuff that buffaloed Lestrade of the Yard. Holmes is always right, of course (ha ha, that buffoon Lestrade), even though his logic chain is so long that its ex
wilder hypotheses... (Score:2)
I agree with your reasoning. But I've also heard an alternative, wilder hypothesis which is intriguing. It begins by asking what, precisely, do we mean by "beauty?" Suppose arguendo we say "beauty" is just a measure of how close you are to some certain ideal; in other words, beauty is the inverse of how far you are from the species mean. The more "unique" you are, the uglier you are.
So then the question is: why be so intent on picking s
Re:Hitchhiker's Guide to The Galaxy (Score:5, Interesting)
I played these audio files on my laptop, and my cat woke up and started sniffing excitedly around the room until he'd narrowed the source down to the little speakers on the front of the laptop. Then, getting confused when he couldn't associate the sound with the correct smell, he looked at me and meowed for help.
Makes me wonder if mouse songs are familiar to cats?
Re:Hitchhiker's Guide to The Galaxy (Score:2)
Re:Hitchhiker's Guide to The Galaxy (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Constant Slashdot Hitchhiker's Guide References (Score:1)
Re:Not bad taste (Score:2, Interesting)
I think the /. geeks "get" HHGTTG because they are quite a sarcastic, smartass bunch, more likley to get a kick from humiliating someone inte
..the cream didn't even taste that good... (Score:2)
This is funny, even for non-Americans... Well, if it is the right person [jaybabcock.com] who is on the receiving end...
Re:Not bad taste (Score:2)
Speaking of which, the best slapstick routine I ever saw was The Custard Pies sketch by Monty Python.
Re:Not bad taste (Score:2)
I agree with you on HHGTTG being hilarious (I literally LOLed through the book) but not on jumping to assume that the grandparent being an American is the sole reason for him not getting British humor. Making generalizations based on country of origin is prejudge.
P.S. I'm Mexican, a very different culture by the way, and didn't find HHGTTG funny until I read it in it's original language(English). I think that HHGTTG's humor is mainly in the writing style, is so subtle that it gets completely lost in trans
If only... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:If only... (Score:1)
Re:If only... (Score:2)
Re:If only... (Score:1, Funny)
Re:If only... (Score:1)
They are not singing (Score:1)
Re:They are not singing (Score:2)
Reminds me of Charles de Gaulle, the famous French leader:
"How can you govern a country that has 246 different kinds of cheese?"
Re:They are not singing (Score:2)
Et tu, DeGaulle? My god, the French really are a nation of pathetic, whiny, defeatists.
"The cheeses! Their variety is... how you say? Too much! Rule such a people? C'est impossible! Better anarchy and suffering than such a doomed ideal!"
Re:They are not singing (Score:2)
And no, you can't come back and say your post was a joke too. It can't be a joke. It's a strong personal attack. Et on a battu le cheval mort way too much for jokes about French inferiority to retain any humor today.
Maybe the French are a nation of pathetic, whiny defeatists, but at least they're pathetic, whiny defeatists with a sense of humor.
Re:They are not singing (Score:2)
Why would I claim my post was a joke? Your funny got lost in translation. Clearly, all of my mean-spiritid distaste for French foreign and domestic policy came through quite clearly. But hey, if it gives the cake, I take the body out.
In other news... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:In other news... (Score:2)
DJ Rat is recording his new mixed tape, which should be released early next Spring. The FCC; however, is not so thrilled, because the mixed tape "is one of the dirtiest fowlest things I have ever heard" said an FCC spokesman. "But it wasn't a suprise I guess, you know- he is a rat after all".
The mix tape would be more fowl if it were written by a duck.
RIAA Officers Said (Score:4, Funny)
Are they sure it was singing? (Score:2, Funny)
Some Mouse Lyrics (Score:2, Funny)
Trying to forget my CHEEEESE-ings for you
CHEEEEEEESE-ings,
Woah woah woah CHEEEEEESE-ings,
Woah woah woah CHEEEEEESE-ings,
OK, that's enough, I'm now annoying even myself.
Lyrics of Mouse Song now deciphered (Score:3, Funny)
M-I-C, K-E-Y, M-O-U-S-E!
Hey there, hi there, ho there, you're as welcome as can be.
M-I-C, K-E-Y, M-O-U-S-E!
Mickey Mouse! (Donald Duck!) Mickey Mouse! (Donald Duck!)
Forever let us hold his banner high, high, HIGH, HIGH!!
Come along and sing the song and join the jamboree.
M-I-C, K-E-Y, M-O-U-S-E!
Re:Lyrics of Mouse Song now deciphered (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Lyrics of Mouse Song now deciphered (Score:1)
Sonny Bono will come down and kill you (Score:1)
[copyvio]
Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean that the ghosts of Salvatore Phillip "Sonny" Bono and Walter Elias Disney aren't out to get you.
Re:Lyrics of Mouse Song now deciphered (Score:2)
A-L-E-X-I S-A-Y-L-E
We love to watch him shout and swear on the tv
If you listen reeeeeaaaaly carefully (Score:1)
Dire Straits? (Score:2)
Hey (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Hey (Score:5, Funny)
Anything to do with it coming out of the opposite end?
Howling Mice Already Discovered (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Howling Mice Already Discovered (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Howling Mice Already Discovered (Score:4, Interesting)
Grasshopper mice aren't rats either... they are a completely different type of rodent that split off way before rats and mice were around. I've raised quite a few mus musculus (common mouse, both albino and all types of fancy; they are all one species), and have recently gotten into the vocal genus Peromyscus, which is the same tribe and subfamily as the grasshopper mouse.
Audible sound in mus musculus is usually a sign of health issues. Peromyscus sing all the damn time. But the good news is that if you can get used to a few wheels turning all night, you can get used to rodents chirping and singing all night as well.
That's what makes this nifty -- turns out mus musculus can sing as well... just not audibly to human ears.
(As an aside, I think I might have heard them... I've had groups of mice curl up and sleep on my shoulder right under my ear while I'm reading and I have heard high pitched noises as they wake and push each other around. I have very good high frequency hearing; I can hear some "silent" burglar alarms that use an active sound and also all manner of CRT noises. I attributed it to protest sounds, but now I'm curious.)
--
Evan
Re:Howling Mice Already Discovered (Score:2)
Re:Howling Mice Already Discovered (Score:2)
No, I'm not a weenie who thinks he can tell the difference between a two foot $2 copper cable and a two foot $180 copper cable or insists that vinyl is "more alive". Nor do I think my ears are somehow able to hear a gnat fart in Patagonia. I like music, not fetishizing fidelity. I lack perfect pitch or anything like that; I just happen to have good hea
Re:Howling Mice Already Discovered (Score:2)
Re:Howling Mice Already Discovered (Score:2)
In my case, I know it's genetic... my grandfather is the same way, as
Have you ever??? (Score:5, Interesting)
Its almost amusing! Like watching the waggle dance of a bee or something.
Seriously, if your in that age group, do whatever your hormones tell you to do. But for us outside of that, you guys and gals are really funny.
And yes, I've "been there done that". It seemed right at the time (hormones again). But humans when they are at their most "animal-like" are pretty funny. Fights can be a part of it, but those are funny too all to themselves.
Re:Have you ever??? (Score:2, Funny)
As in, try to get "a piece of the action"? If you havent forgotten, we're on slashdot.
Alcohol (Score:2)
Re:Alcohol (Score:2)
Oops I just set my tinfoil hat on fire in the microwave!
I wonder what the lyrics are... (Score:2, Funny)
The RIAA has stepped in... (Score:2, Funny)
Mr Adams was right (Score:5, Funny)
Now we just need to work on reverse-engineering their secret ultrasonic communications so that we can find out what they plan to do with us.
Nerd gene (Score:2, Funny)
A fun and safe experiment.... (Score:5, Interesting)
I am wondering if the cats would react?
Re:A fun and safe experiment.... (Score:3, Informative)
Speakers available for use with computers tend to have a range between ~15Hz and ~24kHz. The article says the mice sing at a frequency between 30kHz and 110kHz. Thus, the original tracks wouldn't play on most people's speakers.
Re:A fun and safe experiment.... (Score:1, Informative)
Re:A fun and safe experiment.... (Score:3, Informative)
I found that much more annoying than the barking.
Re:A fun and safe experiment.... (Score:2)
Re:A fun and safe experiment.... (Score:3, Informative)
Partly true, although speakers' frequency response tends to be attenuated gradually, so that at one frequency, it's N decibels quieter than at a frequency an octave lower on the high end, etc. So, the speakers may be capable of producing 110 kHz, just at a reduced level like may
Except for those pesky reconstruction filters (Score:5, Informative)
However, if you wanted to experiment with this, you could try to find an old (and I do mean old) Zenith remote control from the 1970's - they used ultrasound rather than IR as modern gear does, at about a 30kHz frequency. You could then drive that speaker from a DAC on the printer port, possibly with a simple timer chip to create the sample clock so that the computer "thinks" it is seeing a normal printer on the interface (that way you can avoid a great deal of the latency issues, especially if you use a printer port with a hardware FIFO.) You could eliminate the reconstruction filter as the transducer will do most of your filtering for you. Failing that, here [digikey.com] are some transducers that will Git 'R Done.
Re:A fun and safe experiment.... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:A fun and safe experiment.... (Score:2)
Aha, here we go:
In an effort to produce canines with exceptional skill at catching mice and rats, the common men of the day would breed only smallest, quickest and best ratters of the bunch. These men were not out to produce a purebred, sophisticated breed of dog; instead they desired the best dogs to keep the mice away. This is the reason why no records were kept as to what breeds were mixed to create the Yorkshire Terrier. (from http://news.aff [affari.to]
Re:A fun and safe experiment.... (Score:2)
I doubt the exact pitch matters (Score:3, Interesting)
I got nothing... (Score:2)
No Wonder.... (Score:2, Funny)
Ultrasonic pest repellers? (Score:2, Interesting)
Mind you, if noisy environments where you can't hear yourself think are inherently repellent, I guess all the nightclubs should have gone out of business years ago...
Finally, a fitting accompanyment (Score:2)
the better mousetrap (Score:2, Interesting)
Pinky and the Brain (Score:5, Funny)
We're going to do what we do every night...
1..2..1..2..3..4...
"New York, New York...."
Christmas? (Score:1)
So... (Score:2)
And finally, who is going to get in trouble for using torture methods to get these mice to sing?
In a related article (Score:1, Funny)
Hello my baby, hello my honey, hello my ragtime gal,
Send me a kiss by wire,
Old News (Score:5, Interesting)
It is unknown if they are related to the rare "tree squeaks" that live in the treetops and squeak every time the wind rustles their home's boughs.
Interesting? (Score:2, Informative)
I could give a rats ass about mice singing (Score:1, Redundant)
Steve Jobs fund research? (Score:2, Funny)
2. Have them teach mice to sing.
3. Publish results to world, touting the musical abilities of mice.
4. Make micro-nano iPods to affix to the mice.
5. PROFIT!!!
I wonder (Score:2, Offtopic)
New formula (Score:2, Funny)
Uh-oh ... (Score:2)
Rats! The Vogons are getting close!
Challange (Score:2, Interesting)
Run through Google's secret universal translator (Score:2)
Great (Score:3, Insightful)
My cat went nuts when he heard this.. (Score:2, Interesting)
Anyone else with pets care to share observations?
Re:My cat went nuts when he heard this.. (Score:2)
The reduced freq mice and bird "songs" are somewhat similar, probably close enough if the cat has even been a hunter---Mine isn't.
I would still be curious about the reaction to the original version, if one could effectively reproduce it.
And the song? (Score:2, Funny)
"I want to piss on you.. I really do..."
Ultrasonic Rodent Control (Score:2)
Re:like wow.. (Score:2, Insightful)
This isn't "dumb research". It actually helps understand things like language development in humans, learning processes in animals and such, since songs (birdsong included) are quite complex.
Re:like wow.. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:like wow.. (Score:2)
We must not forget that ironically, many of the greatest discoveries in history were either failures or accidents. (The transistor - failed attempt at creating the first FETs, the telephone - a lucky short in the presence of a strong magnet, buckyballs - a forgotten test tube during one night's clean-up, breathable liquids - a rogue mouse that fell in a beaker, etc.)
Re:like wow.. (Score:1, Insightful)
Hey Paul (Score:2)
Eirinn
Re:like wow.. (Score:5, Insightful)
This is why unimaginative people wouldn't be good scientists. From the writeup:
"This can be a potential model for investigating how brain chemistry works during learning."
The study isn't about putting on an all-mouse musical, it's about animal behavior, which has all sorts of other applications. Just because you can't imagine what those might be doesn't make it useless research.
Mice! (Score:2)
Great idea!
Just...gotta make sure 'Mice' isn't playing anywhere near where 'Cats' might be playing.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:like wow.. (Score:1, Flamebait)
Re:like wow.. (Score:2, Informative)
A little background: whether or not these mouse vocalizations count as "song" is in no way the primary focus of our lab. Our work actually focuses on using the pheromone-detection system of mice (aka the accessory olfactory system) as a (relatively) simple model system in which questions about pattern recognit