Publication | Open Access
TIME-EXPANSION AND ZERO-CROSSING PERIOD METER SYSTEMS PRESENT SIGNIFICANTLY DIFFERENT VIEWS OF ECHOLOCATION CALLS OF BATS
48
Citations
18
References
2001
Year
Acoustic CameraAnabat SystemEngineeringHealth SciencesBioacousticsAcoustic Signal ProcessingPhoneticsCondenser MicrophonesStationary BatNoiseSpeech ProcessingAcoustic SensorInstrumentationSpeech PerceptionBiosonarAnimal ImagingSpeech Recognition
We compared 2 bat detecting systems that use condenser microphones, 1 that performed computer analysis (Anabat6) of the output of a zero-crossing period meter (Anabat system) and the other that performed computer analysis (Canary 1.2) of the output of slowed-down (= time-expanded) recordings (Racal system). The 2 systems provided significantly different pictures of both numbers and characteristics (highest frequency, lowest frequency, and duration) of echolocation calls, whether recorded from free-flying bats in the field or from a stationary bat in the laboratory. Although the AnabatII detector was slightly more sensitive than the QMC S200 detector, the Racal system detected more echolocation calls than the Anabat system; the 19-dB difference in sensitivity was associated with a zero-crossing period meter in the Anabat system. Results suggest 2 recommendations. First, that analysis using zero-crossing period meters should not be used to describe echolocation behavior or calls of bats. Second, that studies of activity and use of habitat based on analysis using zero-crossing period meters should involve calibration against more sensitive bat-detecting systems.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1