Academic literature on the topic 'Bioacoustic wall'

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Journal articles on the topic "Bioacoustic wall"

1

Kraman, Steve S., George R. Wodicka, Gary A. Pressler, and Hans Pasterkamp. "Comparison of lung sound transducers using a bioacoustic transducer testing system." Journal of Applied Physiology 101, no. 2 (2006): 469–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.00273.2006.

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Sensors used for lung sound research are generally designed by the investigators or adapted from devices used in related fields. Their relative characteristics have never been defined. We employed an artificial chest wall with a viscoelastic surface and a white noise signal generator as a stable source of sound to compare the frequency response and pulse waveform reproduction of a selection of devices used for lung sound research. We used spectral estimation techniques to determine frequency response and cross-correlation of pulses to determine pulse shape fidelity. The sensors evaluated were
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Jézéquel, Youenn, Julien Bonnel, Nadège Aoki, and T. Aran Mooney. "Tank acoustics substantially distort broadband sounds produced by marine crustaceans." Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 152, no. 6 (2022): 3747–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1121/10.0016613.

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Marine crustaceans produce broadband sounds that have been mostly characterized in tanks. While tank physical impacts on such signals are documented in the acoustic community, they are overlooked in the bioacoustic literature with limited empirical comparisons. Here, we compared broadband sounds produced at 1 m from spiny lobsters ( Panulirus argus) in both tank and in situ conditions. We found significant differences in all sound features (temporal, power, and spectral) between tank and in situ recordings, highlighting that broadband sounds, such as those produced by marine crustaceans, canno
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Wilson, Andrew M., Kenneth S. Boyle, Jennifer L. Gilmore, Cody J. Kiefer, and Matthew F. Walker. "Species-Specific Responses of Bird Song Output in the Presence of Drones." Drones 6, no. 1 (2021): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/drones6010001.

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Drones are now widely used to study wildlife, but their application in the study of bioacoustics is limited. Drones can be used to collect data on bird vocalizations, but an ongoing concern is that noise from drones could change bird vocalization behavior. To test for behavioral impact, we conducted an experiment using 30 sound localization arrays to track the song output of 7 songbird species before, during, and after a 3 min flight of a small quadcopter drone hovering 48 m above ground level. We analyzed 8303 song bouts, of which 2285, from 184 individual birds were within 50 m of the array
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Kazimov, S. "BİOACOUSTİC GREEN WALL: A NEW APPROACH TO SOLVİNG URBAN ENVİRONMENTAL PROBLEMS." Journal of science. Lyon 65 (April 30, 2025). https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15349605.

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<strong>Abstract</strong> Climate change, atmospheric pollution, urbanization and environmental degradation are among the most pressing problems of the 21st century. As a result of rapidly increasing industrialization and population density, the increase in the level of carbon dioxide (CO₂) in the atmosphere, the concentration of harmful particles (PM10, PM2.5), noise pollution and the loss of visual aesthetics pose serious threats to human health and environmental balance. In such a situation, ecological sustainability and technological solutions compatible with the bioenvironment are of grea
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Laffi, Lia, Félix Bigand, Christian Peham, Giacomo Novembre, Marco Gamba, and Andrea Ravignani. "Rhythmic categories in horse gait kinematics." Journal of Anatomy, January 15, 2025. https://doi.org/10.1111/joa.14200.

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AbstractAnecdotally, horses' gaits sound rhythmic. Are they really? In this study, we quantified the motor rhythmicity of horses across three different gaits (walk, trot, and canter). For the first time, we adopted quantitative tools from bioacoustics and music cognition to quantify locomotor rhythmicity. Specifically, we tested whether kinematics data contained rhythmic categories; these occur when adjacent temporal intervals are categorically, rather than randomly, distributed. We extracted the motion cycle duration (tk) of two ipsilateral hooves from motion data of 13 ridden horses and calc
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