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October 2017

The spontaneous acquisition of speech by human infants (vocal learning) is considered a keystone of human language, but the ability to reproduce vocalizations acquired by hearing is not commonly described in other mammals. The recognition of vocal dialects among different populations can open a window on the vocal learning abilities of animals, but such findings in the wild may reflect genetic or ecological variations between groups rather than the learning of group-specific vocal behavior. This study by Prat et al. uses a playback-based lab experiment to induce vocal dialects in fruit bat pups; exposing groups of pups to different playbacks of conspecific calls allowed the authors to establish separate dialects, demonstrating the vocal learning skill of these bats. Furthermore, while songbirds, for instance, learn their songs directly from a specific tutor, the bats showed the ability to pick up vocal variations from the surrounding crowd, without direct interaction with any given tutor. The image shows a captive colony of Egyptian fruit bats (Rousettus aegyptiacus) in their day-time sleeping cluster.

Image Credit: Michal Samuni-Blank

Unsolved Mystery

Magnetoreception—A sense without a receptor

Gregory C. Nordmann, Tobias Hochstoeger, David A. Keays

Community Page

Ethoscopes: An open platform for high-throughput ethomics

Quentin Geissmann, Luis Garcia Rodriguez, Esteban J. Beckwith, Alice S. French, Arian R. Jamasb, Giorgio F. Gilestro

Research Articles

Nonlatching positive feedback enables robust bimodality by decoupling expression noise from the mean

Brandon S. Razooky, Youfang Cao, Maike M. K. Hansen, Alan S. Perelson, Michael L. Simpson, Leor S. Weinberger

Transcriptome analysis of hypoxic cancer cells uncovers intron retention in EIF2B5 as a mechanism to inhibit translation

Lauren K. Brady, Hejia Wang, Caleb M. Radens, Yue Bi, Milan Radovich, Amit Maity, Cristina Ivan, Mircea Ivan, Yoseph Barash, Constantinos Koumenis

Methods and Resources

The sea cucumber genome provides insights into morphological evolution and visceral regeneration

Xiaojun Zhang, Lina Sun, Jianbo Yuan, Yamin Sun, Yi Gao, Libin Zhang, Shihao Li, Hui Dai, Jean-François Hamel, Chengzhang Liu, Yang Yu, Shilin Liu, Wenchao Lin, Kaimin Guo, Songjun Jin, Peng Xu, Kenneth B. Storey, Pin Huan, Tao Zhang, Yi Zhou, Jiquan Zhang, Chenggang Lin, Xiaoni Li, Lili Xing, Da Huo, Mingzhe Sun, Lei Wang, Annie Mercier, Fuhua Li, Hongsheng Yang, Jianhai Xiang

Prediction of drug cocktail effects when the number of measurements is limited

Anat Zimmer, Avichai Tendler, Itay Katzir, Avi Mayo, Uri Alon

A molecular atlas of the developing ectoderm defines neural, neural crest, placode, and nonneural progenitor identity in vertebrates

Jean-Louis Plouhinec, Sofía Medina-Ruiz, Caroline Borday, Elsa Bernard, Jean-Philippe Vert, Michael B. Eisen, Richard M. Harland, Anne H. Monsoro-Burq