Abstract
Early experience in infancy affects cognitive development. Birds, like mammals, acquire cognitive flexibility attributed to a well-developed telencephalon. Precocial chicks acquire imprintability just after hatching when thyroid hormone (T3) flows into the brain and primes later learning. Here, we show that the perihatch synthesis of T3 paralleling thyroid development is crucial for imprinting and endows newborn chicks with cognitive flexibility via a mechanism involving the nidopallium dorsocaudale, the avian “prefrontal cortex.” Imprinted chicks showed higher cognitive flexibility than those unimprinted in switching or reversal task experiments. Notably, we discovered that exogenous T3 endowed similar flexibility in unimprinted chicks. Cognitive stimulation by a surge of thyroid hormone indicates a vertebrate tactic involving high cognitive ability for adapting to environmental changes.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | eadr5113 |
| Journal | Science advances |
| Volume | 10 |
| Issue number | 41 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - 11 Oct 2024 |