Results 201 to 210 of about 122,818 (237)
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Sound production in Scolytidae: Stridulation by “silent” Ips bark beetles

Zeitschrift für Angewandte Entomologie, 1975
AbstractStridulation during “aggressive” behaviour was recorded from males in three species of Ips bark beetles, though the host‐selecting sex was previously believed to be silent. Female Ips tridens tridens, also believed silent, stridulated. Oscillograms show chirps and clicks of I. concinnus males and brief “clicks” of I. pini males and I.
P. T. Oester, J. A. Rudinsky
openaire   +1 more source

Neighing, barking, and drumming horses—object related sounds help and hinder picture naming.

Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2017
The study presented here investigated how environmental sounds influence picture naming. In a series of four experiments participants named pictures (e.g., the picture of a horse) while hearing task-irrelevant sounds (e.g., neighing, barking, or drumming).
Andreas Mädebach   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Fighting and aggressive sound determines larger male to win male‐male competition in a bark beetle

Insect Science, 2020
AbstractIntrasexual selection occurs in male‐male competition over access to females and usually results in the larger male winning. While much research has documented that size matters, little is known about how the larger male wins. Dendroctonus valens is an aggregating monogamous bark beetle in which males have large variation in body size and ...
Zhu‐Dong Liu   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Phonotactic responses and selectivity of barking treefrogs (Hyla gratiosa) to chorus sounds

Journal of Comparative Physiology A, 1988
1. We tested the long-standing hypothesis that female frogs are attracted to the sound of a chorus of conspecific males from a distance. We studied the barking treefrog (Hyla gratiosa) because the location of choruses is unpredictable; thus, chorus sound indicates the presence of conspecific males as well as the location of a suitable breeding site.
H. Carl Gerhardt, Georg M. Klump
openaire   +1 more source

CRITICAL DISCOURSE ANALYSIS USING VAN DIJK'S MODEL IN THE REPORTING OF MOSQUE LOUDSPEAKER REGULATIONS AND MINISTER YAQUT'S STATEMENT COMPARING THE SOUND OF THE CALL TO PRAYER TO DOG BARKING IN TEMPO.COM ONLINE MEDIA

Matapena: Jurnal Keilmuan Bahasa, Sastra, dan Pengajarannya, 2023
This study focuses on the coverage of Minister of Religious Affairs Yakut's statement regarding the call to prayer (azan) compared to the sound of barking dogs currently happening in Indonesia, as published in several online media outlets, particularly Tempo.com.
Pepi Supita, Agus Hamdani
openaire   +1 more source

Sound localization behavior of the green treefrog (Hyla cinerea) and the barking treefrog (H. gratiosa)

Journal of Comparative Physiology ? A, 1976
Female treefrogs (Hyla cinerea andH. gratiosa) can accurately localize a sound source (playback of male mating calls) if both ears are intact. When the sensitivity of one eardrum is attenuated, by coating it with a thin layer of silicone grease, females no longer can locate the sound source.
Albert S. Feng   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Implementation of spectral maxima sound processing for cochlear implants by using Bark scale frequency band partition

2001 Conference Proceedings of the 23rd Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society, 2005
A new method based on Bark scale frequency-band partition is presented to improve the recognition performance of cochlear implants. Using the principles of physics, it is based on the human cochlea filtering properties. Also the mechanism of a cochlear implant and its spectral maxima sound processing (SMSP) strategy are presented.
null Han Xianhua, null Nie Kaibao
openaire   +1 more source

Sound Attenuation for Dogs Barking Using of Transfer Function Method

This paper reports a natural ventilation silencer for an animal cage having considerable sound insertion loss. Many veterinary hospitals face a serious problem that hospitalized animals are stressed from the barks of other dogs in the hospital. To address this problem, a solution that barely affects caged dogs’ health is required. We attempted to use a
Shuichi Sakamoto   +5 more
openaire   +1 more source

The Sound of Barking Dogs: Violence and Terror among Salvadoran Families in the Postwar

Medical Anthropology Quarterly, 2002
This article examines the trans generational transmission of trauma among campesinos living in a rural, repopulated community in El Salvador. Research with Holocaust survivors and their children has shown that traumatic symptoms can be transmitted to children who did not directly experience the Holocaust.
openaire   +2 more sources

Sound and vibration are not obligatory host finding stimuli for the bark beetle parasite,Coeloides brunneri [Hymenoptera: Braconidae]

Entomophaga, 1971
Previous researchers, have speculated or concluded thatCoeloides brunneri Viereck females detect their bark beetle hosts by perception of the vibrations or sound made by boring larvae. However, when placed on logs containing various actively mining stages ofDendroctonus pseudotsugae Hopkins,C.
J. V. Richerson, J. H. Borden
openaire   +1 more source

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