Sarah M. N. Woolley
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Sarah M. N. Woolley is a neuroscientist and Professor of Psychology at Columbia University's Zuckerman Institute. Her work centers on the neuroscience of communication, using songbirds to understand how the brain learns and understands vocal communication.


Academic career

Woolley received her Bachelors of Arts in 1991 from University of Colorado Boulder, studying biology and psychology. She then attended the University of Washington School of Medicine, where she received her PhD in 1999 in neurobiology and Behavior in the laboratory of
Edwin Rubel Edwin Rubel is an American academic and Developmental Neurobiologist holding the position of emeritus professor at the University of Washington. He was the Founding Director and first Virginia Merrill Bloedel Chair in Basic Hearing Research from ...
. Her research centered on how
Bengalese finch Known as the Society finch in North America and the Bengali finch or Bengalese finch elsewhere, ''Lonchura striata domestica'' is a domesticated finch not found in nature. It became a popular cage and trade bird after appearing in European zoos in ...
es learn and maintain songs. She found that while male Bengalese finches do not typically change their song patterns in adulthood, their song patterns require auditory feedback. As a result, if a finch becomes deaf, his song will degrade in about one week. Woolley, however, found that not all sound frequencies are required to maintain a male finch's song. Finches that lost the ability to hear in high-frequency ranges maintained their ability to sustain a consistent song pattern. She also noted that these finches can regenerate auditory hair cells, which can restore hearing within eight weeks following damage to them. For her postdoctoral fellowship, she stayed at the University of Washington, where she performed work to understand the avian auditory midbrain (or the mesencephalicus lateralis, dorsalis, MLd) of zebra finches, which processes multiple parallel inputs and conveys that processed information to the forebrain. She noted that different tones were processed over time in the auditory midbrain and found that this brain region is well-suited to encoding complex sounds with a high degree of temporal accuracy, rather than just responding to specific sound cues. In 2001, Woolley began a second postdoctoral fellowship at the University of California, Berkeley, where she studied the way zebra finches were able to distinguish vocalizations of specific individuals and also differentiate vocalizations from other sounds. She found that the finch's auditory neurons were better able to more accurately distinguish between different zebra finch songs than between synthetic sound segments, suggesting that their neurons are more finely tuned to understanding finch vocalizations. She looked at how single neurons and populations of neurons in the auditory midbrain encode song versus generic noise. She found that the majority of auditory midbrain neurons were able to consistently and precisely tune in to finch vocalizations, while they exhibited a high degree of variability in response to generic noise.


Research

In 2006, Woolley joined the faculty at Columbia University in the Department of Psychology. Between 2013 and 2016 she served as Chairperson for the department and in 2014 became an elected member of the
Kavli Institute for Brain Science Kavli () is a Norwegian brand of soft cheese, caviar, mayonnaise, crackers and milk. The company sells products in 30 countries, with plants in Norway, Finland, Sweden, Denmark, England and Scotland. In 1914, Olav Kavli founded Kavli Hold ...
. Her lab studies the underlying neuroscience of the ways bengalese, zebra, and
long-tailed finch The long-tailed finch (''Poephila acuticauda'') is a common species of estrildid finch found in northern Australia, from the Kimberley region to the Gulf of Carpentaria. It is a predominantly fawn-coloured bird with a pale grey head and promine ...
es learn, perform, and understand vocalizations as a model to better understand how humans communicate through sound in a variety of contexts. Her lab has studied the effects of song upon mating choice. All songbird brains are finely tuned to convert sound waves to social messages. Woolley's group found that male and female brains are tuned and wired in different ways. Her research is supported by the National Science Foundation and the National Institutes of Health.


Awards and honors

* Elected member, Kavli Institute for Brain Science, 2014 * Searle Scholars Program Award, 2007 – 2011


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Woolley, Sarah M. N. American neuroscientists Columbia University faculty University of Washington School of Medicine alumni University of Colorado Boulder alumni American women neuroscientists Year of birth missing (living people) Living people American women academics 21st-century American women