We’re too busy singing: acoustic analysis with apes

This project focuses on novel methods for investigating auditory perception and associated environmental enrichment of great apes in managed scenarios. Research outputs can inform animal husbandry and the design of human and animal infrastructures in both managed and wild environments. This is a rep...

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Main Authors: French, Fiona, Good, Stephen, Mokkadem, Karim, Frost, Naomi, Finch, Katherine
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
English
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://repository.londonmet.ac.uk/9762/1/ACI24_emergingwork_acoustics.pdf
https://repository.londonmet.ac.uk/9762/7/3702336.3702349.pdf
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author French, Fiona
Good, Stephen
Mokkadem, Karim
Frost, Naomi
Finch, Katherine
author_facet French, Fiona
Good, Stephen
Mokkadem, Karim
Frost, Naomi
Finch, Katherine
author_sort French, Fiona
collection LMU
description This project focuses on novel methods for investigating auditory perception and associated environmental enrichment of great apes in managed scenarios. Research outputs can inform animal husbandry and the design of human and animal infrastructures in both managed and wild environments. This is a report from the start of the project, explaining the motivation for the research and demonstrating the utility of soundscape analysis for identifying anthropogenic noise that potentially impacts on great ape welfare, natural behaviours and communication strategies. At this early stage, technology is being used to passively monitor acoustic signals in the environment and subsequently support the analysis of recordings, using visualisation and machine learning techniques to reveal patterns and identify sound sources. Initial findings demonstrate that the fundamental frequency of gorilla low growls fall in the range of 150 to 200 Hz, with subharmonics as low as 30 Hz, just on the edge of human hearing. Ultimately, we are planning a deeper investigation of auditory perception, by developing interactive devices that offer agency to non-humans and enable us to find out more about the hearing capabilities of different species.
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spelling oai:repository.londonmet.ac.uk:97622024-12-09T09:22:17Z https://repository.londonmet.ac.uk/9762/ We’re too busy singing: acoustic analysis with apes French, Fiona Good, Stephen Mokkadem, Karim Frost, Naomi Finch, Katherine 000 Computer science, information & general works 590 Animals (Zoology) This project focuses on novel methods for investigating auditory perception and associated environmental enrichment of great apes in managed scenarios. Research outputs can inform animal husbandry and the design of human and animal infrastructures in both managed and wild environments. This is a report from the start of the project, explaining the motivation for the research and demonstrating the utility of soundscape analysis for identifying anthropogenic noise that potentially impacts on great ape welfare, natural behaviours and communication strategies. At this early stage, technology is being used to passively monitor acoustic signals in the environment and subsequently support the analysis of recordings, using visualisation and machine learning techniques to reveal patterns and identify sound sources. Initial findings demonstrate that the fundamental frequency of gorilla low growls fall in the range of 150 to 200 Hz, with subharmonics as low as 30 Hz, just on the edge of human hearing. Ultimately, we are planning a deeper investigation of auditory perception, by developing interactive devices that offer agency to non-humans and enable us to find out more about the hearing capabilities of different species. 2024-12-02 Conference or Workshop Item PeerReviewed text en cc_by_nd_4 https://repository.londonmet.ac.uk/9762/1/ACI24_emergingwork_acoustics.pdf text en cc_by_nc_nd_4 https://repository.londonmet.ac.uk/9762/7/3702336.3702349.pdf French, Fiona, Good, Stephen, Mokkadem, Karim, Frost, Naomi and Finch, Katherine (2024) We’re too busy singing: acoustic analysis with apes. In: International Conference on Animal-Computer Interaction 2024, 2-5 December 2024, University of Glasgow. https://doi.org/10.1145/3702336.3702349 10.1145/3702336.3702349 10.1145/3702336.3702349
spellingShingle 000 Computer science, information & general works
590 Animals (Zoology)
French, Fiona
Good, Stephen
Mokkadem, Karim
Frost, Naomi
Finch, Katherine
We’re too busy singing: acoustic analysis with apes
title We’re too busy singing: acoustic analysis with apes
title_full We’re too busy singing: acoustic analysis with apes
title_fullStr We’re too busy singing: acoustic analysis with apes
title_full_unstemmed We’re too busy singing: acoustic analysis with apes
title_short We’re too busy singing: acoustic analysis with apes
title_sort we re too busy singing acoustic analysis with apes
topic 000 Computer science, information & general works
590 Animals (Zoology)
url https://repository.londonmet.ac.uk/9762/1/ACI24_emergingwork_acoustics.pdf
https://repository.londonmet.ac.uk/9762/7/3702336.3702349.pdf
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