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Dive into the research topics where Mathieu Amy is active.

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Featured researches published by Mathieu Amy.


Animal Cognition | 2012

Worms under cover: relationships between performance in learning tasks and personality in great tits (Parus major)

Mathieu Amy; Kees van Oers; Marc Naguib

In animals, individual differences in learning ability are common and are in part explained by genetic differences, developmental conditions and by general experience. Yet, not all variations in learning are well understood. Individual differences in learning may be associated with elementary individual characteristics that are consistent across situations and over time, commonly referred to as personality or temperament. Here, we tested whether or not male great tits (Parus major) from two selection lines for fast or slow exploratory behaviour, an operational measure for avian personality, vary in their learning performance in two related consecutive tasks. In the first task, birds had to associate a colour with a reward whereas in the second task, they had to associate a new colour with a reward ignoring the previously rewarded colour. Slow explorers had shorter latencies to approach the experimental device compared with fast explorers in both tasks, but birds from the two selection lines did not differ in accomplishing the first task, that is, to associate a colour with a reward. However, in the second task, fast explorers had longer latencies to solve the trials than slow explorers. Moreover, relative to the number of trials needed to reach the learning criteria in the first task, birds from the slow selection line took more trials to associate a new colour with a reward while ignoring the previously learned association compared with birds from the fast selection line. Overall, the experiments suggest that personality in great tits is not strongly related to learning per se in such an association task, but that birds from different selection lines might express different learning strategies as birds from the different selection lines were differently affected by their previous learning performance.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Heaven it's my wife! Male canaries conceal extra-pair courtships but increase aggressions when their mate watches.

Davy Ung; Mathieu Amy; Gérard Leboucher

Many animals live in a communication network, an environment where individuals can obtain information about competitors or potential mates by observing interactions between conspecifics. In such an environment, interactants might benefit by changing their signalling behaviour in the presence of an audience. This audience effect seems widespread among species, has been observed during various types of interaction (e.g. intra-sexual vs. inter-sexual interaction) and varies according to the social context (e.g. gender, hierarchical or mating status of the audience). However, the way individuals might adapt their signalling behaviour to a combination of these factors remains poorly understood. To address this question, we studied how the presence of an audience affects the behaviour of male domestic canaries Serinus canaria during two types of interactions: (i) an extra-pair interaction and (ii) a male-male competition for food. Males were observed under three conditions: (a) in the absence of audience, (b) in the presence of their mate or (c) of a familiar female. Our results show that male domestic canaries minutely adapt their courting and agonistic behaviours to a combination of: (i) the type of interaction (extra-pair interaction/male-male competition), (ii) the social context (mate, familiar female or nobody in audience) and (iii) the behaviours of both the audience and the interactant. These results highlight the ability of animals to subtly adapt their behaviour to the social environment. This also raises questions about the cognitive foundations and evolution of these processes especially considering that canaries are known neither for having high cognitive abilities nor for being a typical example for the social intelligence hypothesis.


Advances in The Study of Behavior | 2012

Studying Female Reproductive Activities in Relation to Male Song: The Domestic Canary as a Model

Gérard Leboucher; Eric Vallet; Laurent Nagle; Nathalie Béguin; Dalila Bovet; Frédérique Hallé; Tudor I. Draganoiu; Mathieu Amy; Michel Kreutzer

Abstract Birdsong in oscine birds serves both intrasexual and intersexual functions. The aim of this chapter is to contribute to a better understanding of how birdsong is involved in female reproductive activity using the domestic canary as a model. Some special song phrases containing bipartite syllables composed of abrupt frequency falls and short silences (sexy phrases) appear to be particularly efficient to elicit sexual responses. Females canaries seem predisposed to prefer sexy phrases even though early or adult acoustic experience can affect this phenomenon. Moreover, eavesdropping on singing interactions, previous reproductive experience, as well as physical condition may be involved in shaping females’ preferences. Repeated exposures to male sexy phrases during reproduction do not influence the development of nest building or egg laying but affect egg quality. From the sender perspective, the production of the complex sexy phrases needs particular skills from the peripheral motor level as well as the central nervous system level.


Royal Society Open Science | 2015

Female signalling to male song in the domestic canary, Serinus canaria

Mathieu Amy; Pauline Salvin; Marc Naguib; Gérard Leboucher

Most studies on sexual selection focus on male characteristics such as male song in songbirds. Yet female vocalizations in songbirds are growing in interest among behavioural and evolutionary biologists because these vocalizations can reveal the females preferences for male traits and may affect male display. This study was designed to test whether male song performance influences the different female signals in the domestic canary (Serinus canaria). Female canaries were exposed to three types of song performance, differing in the repetition rate of sexy syllables. This experiment demonstrates that female birds are engaged in multimodal communication during sexual interaction. The results support the copulation solicitation hypothesis for female-specific trills: these trills were positively correlated and had a similar pattern to the copulation solicitation displays; responses were higher to the songs with higher performance and responses decreased with the repetition of the stimulation. Also, we observed a sensitization effect with the repetition of the song of the highest performance for the simple calls. Simple trills and other calls were more frequent during the broadcast of canary songs compared with the heterospecific control songs. The differential use of female signals in response to different song performance reveals a highly differentiated female signalling system which is discussed in light of the role of female traits to understand sexual selection in a broader perspective.


Behavioural Processes | 2018

Consistency of female preference for male song in the domestic canary using two measures: Operant conditioning and vocal response

Pauline Salvin; Sébastien Derégnaucourt; Gérard Leboucher; Mathieu Amy

Variation of female preferences is often reported in the literature and could be related to an artefact derived from multiple different methods used. Thus, there is a need to evaluate the influence of different methods when assessing female preferences. The present study aims to compare female preferences obtained from an operant conditioning test and from female vocal responses to male song in the domestic canary (Serinus canaria). In an operant conditioning test, females had the possibility to choose between two keys; a peck on one key elicited a supposed very attractive canary song while a peck on the other key elicited a less attractive song. Meanwhile, female vocal responses were recorded. Our results revealed that female canaries preferred to peck on the key eliciting the attractive song and that they emitted more copulation calls in response to the attractive song compared to the less attractive song. This study shows the congruence of these two methods and further suggests that they are reliable to study female preferences in laboratory conditions.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Pet-directed speech draws adult dogs’ attention more efficiently than Adult-directed speech

Sarah Jeannin; Caroline Gilbert; Mathieu Amy; Gérard Leboucher

Humans speak to dogs using a special speech register called Pet-Directed Speech (PDS) which is very similar to Infant-Directed Speech (IDS) used by parents when talking to young infants. These two type of speech share prosodic features that are distinct from the typical Adult-Directed Speech (ADS): a high pitched voice and an increased pitch variation. So far, only one study has investigated the effect of PDS on dogs’ attention. We video recorded 44 adult pet dogs and 19 puppies when listening to the same phrase enounced either in ADS or in PDS or in IDS. The phrases were previously recorded and were broadcasted via a loudspeaker placed in front of the dog. The total gaze duration of the dogs toward the loudspeaker, was used as a proxy of attention. Results show that adult dogs are significantly more attentive to PDS than to ADS and that their attention significantly increases along with the rise of the fundamental frequency of human’ speech. It is likely that the exaggerated prosody of PDS is used by owners as an ostensive cue for dogs that facilitates the effectiveness of their communication, and should represent an evolutionarily determined adaptation that benefits the regulation and maintenance of their relationships.


Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 2010

Effects of personality on territory defence in communication networks: a playback experiment with radio-tagged great tits

Mathieu Amy; Philipp Sprau; P. de Goede; Marc Naguib


Animal Behaviour | 2008

Female canary mate preferences: differential use of information from two types of male–male interaction

Mathieu Amy; Marie Monbureau; Clémentine Durand; Doris Gomez; Marc Théry; Gérard Leboucher


Ethology | 2010

Eavesdropping on Male Singing Interactions Leads to Differential Allocation in Eggs

Violaine Garcia-Fernandez; Mathieu Amy; André Lacroix; Giorgio Malacarne; Gérard Leboucher


Archive | 2012

Studying Female Reproductive Activities in Relation to Male Song

Gérard Leboucher; Eric Vallet; Laurent Nagle; Nathalie Béguin; Dalila Bovet; Frédérique Hallé; Tudor I. Draganoiu; Mathieu Amy; Michel Kreutzer

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Gérard Leboucher

Paris West University Nanterre La Défense

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Marc Naguib

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Caroline Gilbert

École nationale vétérinaire d'Alfort

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