DocumentCode :
1368096
Title :
Automatic Detection and Characterization of Dispersive North Atlantic Right Whale Upcalls Recorded in a Shallow-Water Environment Using a Region-Based Active Contour Model
Author :
Mohammad, Bashar ; McHugh, Ronald
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Eng. & Phys. Sci., Heriot-Watt Univ., Edinburgh, UK
Volume :
36
Issue :
3
fYear :
2011
fDate :
7/1/2011 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
431
Lastpage :
440
Abstract :
Various automatic detection and characterization techniques have been proposed to implement mitigation measures to protect the endangered North Atlantic Right Whales in their habitats. These species prefer shallow waters during their seasonal migration. Such shallow-water acoustical environments act as a waveguide and cause the monocomponent upcall emitted by the vocalizing whale to become a dispersive multicomponent signal with different time arrivals and relative energy. In this paper, the discrimination between the Right Whale upcalls and background noise has been investigated using the support vector machine classifier. To perform this task, a region-based active contour segmentation method is proposed. In this work, both synthesized data based on typical Right Whale vocalizations and real data recorded in Cape Cod Bay are used to evaluate the proposed method. We show how the shallow-water dispersion effects which cause higher order mode generation affect the parameters used for classification and descriptive statistics. We compare the descriptive statistics of the call duration using both single-mode and multimode approaches. The single-mode analysis was performed by extracting the frequency contour of the first mode.
Keywords :
Fourier transforms; acoustic signal detection; acoustic signal processing; bioacoustics; biology computing; noise; physiological models; support vector machines; zoology; Cape Cod Bay; automatic detection; dispersive North Atlantic Right Whale upcalls; dispersive multicomponent signal; noise; region-based active contour segmentation method; shallow-water acoustical environments; shallow-water dispersion effects; support vector machine classifier; typical Right Whale vocalizations; Active contours; Dispersion; Feature extraction; Image segmentation; Spectrogram; Time frequency analysis; Whales; Active contours; Right Whale vocalization; dispersive shallow-water environment; feature extraction; modal arrivals;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Oceanic Engineering, IEEE Journal of
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0364-9059
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/JOE.2010.2060790
Filename :
5618581
Link To Document :
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