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Bird Song

open access: yes, 2008
Bird song is one of the most remarkable and impressive sounds in the natural world, and has inspired not only students of natural history, but also great writers, poets and composers. Extensively updated from the first edition, the main thrust of this book is to suggest that the two main functions of song are attracting a mate and defending territory ...
C. K. Catchpole, P. J. B. Slater
openaire   +2 more sources

Unsupervised classification to improve the quality of a bird song recording dataset

open access: yesEcological Informatics, 2023
Open audio databases such as Xeno-Canto are widely used to build datasets to explore bird song repertoire or to train models for automatic bird sound classification by deep learning algorithms.
Jérôme Sueur, Sylvain Haupert
exaly   +3 more sources

Bird-DB: A database for annotated bird song sequences

open access: yesEcological Informatics, 2015
Projects on the acoustic monitoring of animals in natural habitats generally face the problem of managing extensive amounts of data, both needed for - and produced by - observation or experimentation.
Martin L Cody, Edgar E Vallejo
exaly   +3 more sources
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Synthesizing bird song

Physical Review E, 2005
In this work we present an electronic syrinx: an analogical integrator of the equations describing a model for sound production by oscine birds. The model depends on time varying parameters with clear biological interpretation: the air sac pressure and the tension of ventral syringeal muscles.
D, Zysman   +5 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Bird song learning in an eavesdropping context

open access: yesAnimal Behaviour, 2007
Bird song learning is a major model system for the study of learning with many parallels to human language development. In this experiment we examined a critical but poorly understood aspect of song learning: its social context.
Michael D Beecher   +2 more
exaly   +2 more sources

ULTRASONIC FREQUENCIES IN BIRD SONG

Ibis, 1962
THERE is much circumstantial evidence that, in the majority of birds at least, the communicative function of call notes and song depends principally if not entirely on those frequencies which fall within the range of normal human hearing1. Nevertheless, the limitations of the recording apparatus which has so far been used in the study of bird song are ...
W H, THORPE, D R, GRIFFIN
openaire   +2 more sources

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