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Automated extraction of odontocete whistle contours
- Source :
- The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America. 130:2212-2223
- Publication Year :
- 2011
- Publisher :
- Acoustical Society of America (ASA), 2011.
-
Abstract
- Many odontocetes produce frequency modulated tonal calls known as whistles. The ability to automatically determine time × frequency tracks corresponding to these vocalizations has numerous applications including species description, identification, and density estimation. This work develops and compares two algorithms on a common corpus of nearly one hour of data collected in the Southern California Bight and at Palmyra Atoll. The corpus contains over 3000 whistles from bottlenose dolphins, long- and short-beaked common dolphins, spinner dolphins, and melon-headed whales that have been annotated by a human, and released to the Moby Sound archive. Both algorithms use a common signal processing front end to determine time × frequency peaks from a spectrogram. In the first method, a particle filter performs Bayesian filtering, estimating the contour from the noisy spectral peaks. The second method uses an adaptive polynomial prediction to connect peaks into a graph, merging graphs when they cross. Whistle contours are extracted from graphs using information from both sides of crossings. The particle filter was able to retrieve 71.5% (recall) of the human annotated tonals with 60.8% of the detections being valid (precision). The graph algorithm's recall rate was 80.0% with a precision of 76.9%.
- Subjects :
- Signal processing
Sound Spectrography
Time Factors
Acoustics and Ultrasonics
Computer science
business.industry
Bioacoustics
Dolphins
Acoustics
Reproducibility of Results
Bayes Theorem
Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted
Pattern recognition
Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous)
Animals
Spectrogram
Artificial intelligence
Vocalization, Animal
business
Algorithms
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 00014966
- Volume :
- 130
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....c70657e600b286b9c3ed742b510c66d1