长期海洋观测站鲸类动物声调的自动探测与分类

Tzu‐Hao Lin, Hsin-Yi Yu, Chi-Fang Chen, L. Chou
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引用次数: 4

摘要

被动声监测是通过连续记录来检测鲸类动物出现的时间变化的有效方法。然而,对行为变异的解释仍然很困难。鲸类动物的音调被认为在交流中起着重要作用。声调使用的变化可以表明鲸类动物行为的变化。在本研究中,我们应用广义音调声探测器对台湾东北海域海底电缆承载天文台(MACHO)的录音进行检测。音调声音检测器是一种改进的局部-最大检测器,它以2毫秒的时间间隔检查音调的突出性。根据调性声音的短时瞬态特征来确定检测结果。在后处理中分离了突发脉冲、基频和谐波。检测结果可用于分析调性声音的频率分布和调制。在单独的轮廓提取之后,对音调进行分类,通过持续时间和频率归一化来检查曲目组成。明显的夜间事件被确定为爆发脉冲和音调声音。音调的模态频率差异不显著,但重叠音调的百分比、频率分布的Shannon熵和曲目复杂性在日周期中存在显著差异。现有的音调调节和曲目复杂性的量化框架为鲸类行为的变异性提供了直观的参数,可用于研究鲸类栖息地利用的时间变化。通过对自动分类所建立的库进行比较,可以提高对不同种类和行为的区分精度。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Automatic detection and classification of cetacean tonal sounds from a long-term marine observatory
Passive acoustic monitoring is effective for examining the temporal variation of cetacean occurrences through continuous recording. However, the interpretation of behavior variability remains difficult. Cetacean tonal sounds are believed to play an important role in communication. Changes in tonal sound usage can be indicative of changes in cetacean behavior. In this study, we applied a generalized tonal sound detector on recordings from the marine cable hosted observatory (MACHO) off Northeastern Taiwan. The tonal sound detector is a modified local-max detector, which examines the prominence of tonality in 2 ms time intervals. Detections were confirmed based on the short-time transient characteristic of tonal sounds. The burst pulse, fundamental frequency, and harmonic were separated during post-processing. The detection results can be used to analyze the frequency distribution and modulation of the tonal sounds. Following individual contour extractions, the tonal sounds were classified to examine the repertoire composition through duration and frequency normalization. An evident nighttime occurrence was identified for both the burst pulse and tonal sound. The mode frequency of tonal sound did not show a significant difference, but the percentage of overlapping tonal sounds, Shannon entropy of frequency distribution, and repertoire complexity varied significantly among diurnal cycles. The current framework of quantification on tonal sound modulation and repertoire complexity provides intuitive parameters for the variability of cetacean behavior, which can be used to examine the temporal variations of cetacean habitat use. The precision in distinguishing different species and behaviors may be increased by comparing the repertoire established through automatic classification.
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