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From: Marcos Gridi-P. <mg...@uc...> - 2009-03-24 01:00:41
|
Emprego temporario (6 meses) em fazendo pesquisa em bioacustica de animais marinhos em navio de pesquisa ingles para o International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW) . Inscricoes ate 4 pm do dia 31de March de 2009. Inicio em junho de 2009. Maiores informacoes abaixo: ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW) works to improve the welfare of wild and domestic animals throughout the world by reducing commercial exploitation of animals, protecting wildlife habitats, and assisting animals in distress. Song of the Whale (SOTW) is a 22m purpose built British registered sailing vessel designed to provide a flexible working platform for our onboard research team. Using passive acoustic and visual techniques, the team carries out studies of threatened and endangered marine mammals and their habitats, educates students, trains scientists and develops and disseminates non-invasive research techniques around the world. We seek an enthusiastic and well qualified RESEARCH ASSISTANT to join our multidisciplinary team on a 6 month Fixed Term Contract. Salary c. £22,000 (pro rata). The post holder will participate in the design, implementation, analysis and reporting of research projects from RV Song of the Whale in addition to taking part in outreach and advocacy work carried out by the team. For further information about the SOTW team and projects please see www.ifaw.org/sotw. Requirements · Education to university higher degree level in a relevant scientific/technical subject. · A broad knowledge of cetacean research techniques, including passive acoustics, signal processing techniques and concepts, and statistics · A good working knowledge of computing including relational database design, and experience of a relational database system, preferably Microsoft Access, as well as preferably appropriate programming languages such as Matlab, Visual Basic and/or SPLUS. · Excellent communication and personal skills to work with a diverse team of colleagues often in challenging conditions; and to communicate with variety of audiences including media and general public. Multi-lingual skills an advantage. Experience · At least three years experience in the field of cetacean science or field research would be advantageous. · Experience and background knowledge of marine mammal acoustics and vocalisations both in the field and in analysis of acoustic data · Experience of working in a team and with researchers in other institutions both nationally and internationally. · Experience of working on and handling small boats would be very useful. How to apply Complete the application form which can be downloaded with the full job description from www.ifaw.org/uk/employment Return the application form together with your cv by: (a) email to rec...@if... or (b) post to RecruitUK, IFAW, 89 Albert Embankment, London SE1 7UD. CVs will not be accepted without the completed application form. Applications to be received no later than 4pm on the 31st March 09. Interviews will likely be conducted during the week 20th April. The successful candidate would be required to take up the post by the beginning of June 09. Please note that these posts do not necessarily qualify for a UK work permit. --------------------------------------------------------- DISCLAIMER: The International Fund for Animal Welfare works to improve the welfare of wild and domestic animals throughout the world by reducing commercial exploitation of animals, protecting wildlife habitats, and assisting animals in distress. IFAW seeks to motivate the public to prevent cruelty to animals and to promote animal welfare and conservation policies that advance the well-being of both animals and people. |
From: Marcos Gridi-P. <mg...@uc...> - 2008-10-11 16:16:20
|
O 10th International Mammalogical Congress, em Mendoza, Argentina em 2009 tera um simposio sobre comunicacao acustica em mamiferos terrestres e aquaticos. Resumos para palestras ou posters deverao ser enviados ate 20 de julho de 2009 para Ana Paula Cutrera (acu...@gm...). Maiores informacoes abaixo e em http://www.cricyt.edu.ar/imc10/venue.html. -------------------------------------------------------------------- We are pleased to announce that our proposal for organizing a symposium of “Acoustic communication in terrestrial and aquatic mammals” has been accepted by the Organization Committee of the 10th International Mammalogical Conference, which will be hosted in Mendoza, Argentina next year. We would like to invite all the “bioacousticians” to submit their proposals to take part in this event. The symposium will consist of two types of presentations (please refer to the attachment for further information): a) Oral presentations: Because the symposium is planned to last 3 hours and a half, we are limited to 6-7 speakers maximum. Hence, we ask all those who are interested in participating as speakers to send us a 2-page written proposal (in English) of the topic you are studying that involves acoustic communication (aerial or underwater) in mammal species, what are your main results and how this research has contributed to the growth of a particular biological discipline in your country and in general. We would appreciate if you could also send us your contact information (work affiliation and e-mail address). Speakers will have 20 minutes and presentations should be done in English, the official language of the conference. b) Posters: Due to the amount of people we expect for this event, we asked the IMC organization committee permission to organize a satellite poster session after the symposium, so students, professors and researchers working in different aspects involving acoustic communication can gather together to exchange ideas, discuss different perspectives and learn more about vocal communication and how they serve as interesting study model in different areas of research. Those of you who are interested in participating in this poster session should send a brief description of your area of research and your contact information as well. Deadline for submission of proposals to participate in the symposium and/or the satellite poster session is July 20th. Proposals should be emailed to Ana Paula Cutrera: acu...@gm... We hope to see you all next year in Mendoza! Kind regards, Isabelle Charrier ************************************************************************ Isabelle CHARRIER Equipe Communications Acoustiques, NAMC-CNRS UMR 8620 Université Paris Sud, Bat.446, 91405 Orsay, FRANCE Tel:(33-1).69.15.68.26 Fax:(33-1).69.15.77.26 Email: isa...@u-... Isabelle's website: http://pinniped.free.fr/ Bioacoustics Team website: http://www.cb.u-psud.fr/ ************************************************************************ -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Marcos Gridi-Papp, PhD mg...@uc... University of California Department of Physiological Science 621 Charles E. Young Drive S. 90095 Los Angeles, California, USA ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
From: Marcos Gridi-P. <mg...@uc...> - 2008-06-03 22:08:12
|
Emprego por um ano com possibilidade de renovacao no Disney Animal Kingdom (Florida), como assistente de pesquisa em projetos envolvendo elefantes africanos, roedores e primatas. A contratacao eh atravez da Universidade da Florida Central, para comecar em setembro. Inscricoes ate 11 de julho. Veja abaixo. --------------------------------------------------------------- Research Assistant Needed - Animal Acoustic Communication Position Description: Assist in the operation of the Animal Acoustic Communication and Behavior Program at Disney's Animal Kingdom, Florida, U.S.A. The successful candidate will be trained in acoustical methods and behavioral analyses as needed, and support acoustic research on rodents, primates and the African elephant. Project Description: Researchers in the Wildlife Tracking Center at Disney's Animal Kingdom are conducting long-term projects investigating the vocal communication system of the African elephant and the Key Largo Wood Rat, and the effects of ambient noise on primates in zoos. The successful candidate will provide support for these and other projects as needed, including data collection, and analysis of digitized acoustical data and analysis of behavior from video. Major Duties and Responsibilities * Assists in data collection and data processing * Analyzes vocalization and behavioral data according to established methodologies * Staffs the Wildlife Tracking Center, which is in view of park guests, and actively participates in Guest Interactions as assigned *Assists in the development of interactive, interpretive experiences with guests in partnership with the scientific and education staff Term: This is a one-year contract appointment administered through the University of Central Florida beginning in September 2008. The position may be renewed for one additional year. Qualifications * M.A. / M.S. in animal behavior or related field, or B.A. / B.S. in animal behavior field with research experience in animal behavior * Strong analytical skills, detail-oriented * Previous involvement in research on animal behavior / communication * Excellent written and oral communication skills for both formal and informal audiences * Ability to work with others in a fast paced, team oriented atmosphere Desired qualifications * Research experience on vocal communication, acoustic analysis, or passive acoustic monitoring * Knowledge of statistical analyses and SPSS or STATISTICA software Send cover letter, resume, transcripts, and names and contact information of 3 references to: Joseph M. Soltis, Ph.D. Education & Science, Disney's Animal Kingdom email: Jos...@di... <mailto:Jos...@di...> Deadline: July 11, 2008 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Marcos Gridi-Papp, PhD University of California Department of Physiological Science 621 Charles E. Young Drive S. 90095 Los Angeles, California, USA ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
From: Marcos Gridi-P. <mg...@uc...> - 2008-06-03 21:51:36
|
Estao disponiveis online os anais do encontro realizado na Alemanha em dezembro de 2007 sobre bioacustica computacional para o monitoramento de biodiversidade. Varios animais, ambientes, solucoes de hardware e de software foram abordados por pesquisadores renomados. Esta tudo compilado em um pdf de 11 MB. http://www.biodiv-chm.de/konvention/F1052472515/Documents/Skript234_Bioacoustic Conference proceedings "Computational bioacoustics for assessing biodiversity" of the International Expert meeting on IT-based detection of bioacoustical patterns, December 7th until December 10th, 2007 at the International Academy for Nature Conservation (INA) Isle of Vilm, Germany. ------------------------------------------------- Conteudo: Short term and long term bioacoustic monitoring of the marine environment. Results from NEMO ONDE experiment and way ahead Pavan, G., La Manna, G. , Zardin, F. , Internullo, E., Kloeti, S., Cosentino, G., Speziale. F., Riccobene, G. & the NEMO Collaboration A perennial acoustic observatory in the Antarctic Ocean Kindermann, L., Boebel, O., Bornemann, H., Burkhardt, E., Klinck, H., van Opzeeland, I.,Plötz, J. & A.-M. Seibert Probabilistic evaluation of synergetic ultrasound pattern recognition for large scale bat surveys Obrist, M.K., Boesch, R. & P. Flückiger Anurans, the group of terrestrial vertebrates most vulnerable to climate change: a case study with acoustic monitoring in the Iberian Peninsula Márquez, R., Llusia, D., Beltrán, J.F., do Amaral, J.P. & R.G. Bowkers A decade of monitoring frog communities in Northern Australia Grigg, G., McCallum, H. & A. Taylor Automated bioacoustic identification of insects for phytosanitary and ecological applications Chesmore, D. From bird species to individual songs recognition: automated methods for localization and recognition in real habitats using wireless sensor networks Trifa, V. M., Kirschel, A., Yao, Y., Taylor, C. & L. Girod Advantages and disadvantages of acoustic monitoring of birds – realistic scenarios for automated bioacoustic monitoring in a densely populated region Frommolt, K.-H., Tauchert, K.-H. & M. Koch Bird song recognition in complex audio scenes Bardeli, R., Wolff, D. & M.Clausen Techniques for bioacoustic signal detection using image processing Brandes, T.S. Bioacoustic classifier system design as a knowledge engineering problem Huebner, S. Computational methods in analysis of bird song complexity Tanttu, J. T. & J. Turunen Automated monitoring of avian flight calls during nocturnal migration Schrama, T., Poot, M., Robb, M. & H. Slabbekoorn Birds and bats: automatic recording of flight calls and their value for the study of migration Hill, R. & O. Hüppop XBAT: an open-source extensible platform for bioacoustic research and monitoring Figueroa, H. & M. Robbins -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Marcos Gridi-Papp, PhD University of California Department of Physiological Science 621 Charles E. Young Drive S. 90095 Los Angeles, California, USA ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
From: Marcos Gridi-P. <mg...@uc...> - 2007-11-21 17:15:40
|
Ola Fausto, A equacao da reta deve ter a forma: y = xa + b onde y é a frequencia e x é o tamanho. Para cada espécie, voce pode substituir x pelo tamanho do animal para obter a frequencia (y). Imagine uma tabela contendo tres colunas: a especie, a frequencia dominante observada para cada especie, e a frequencia obtida atravez da equacao da reta. Agora uma quarta coluna pode ser calculada: residuo = freqObservada - freqReta Subtraindo a frequencia da reta da frequencia observada voce vai obter o residuo para cada especie. Os residuos contem a variacao de frequencia que nao pode ser explicada pelo tamanho. Voce pode agora usar os residuos para continuar a sua analise tendo removido o efeito do tamanho. Programas como SPSS e Systat permitem salvar os residuos como uma coluna adicional na planilha de dados quando voce pede por uma regressao. Veja as opcoes na janela da analise de regressao. A media dos residuos deve ser nula. Se quiser fazer graficos mostrando frequencia sem o efeito de tamanho, voce pode adicionar aos residuos a media geral de frequencia, ou o valor minimo, ou qualquer valor que faca sentido. Nesse caso, voce deve indicar nos metodos ou na legenda do grafico que o efeito do tamanho foi removido por analise de regressao e que as frequencias foram ajustadas para a media da comunidade, ou para o minimo, ou para a frequencia que corresponde ao tamanho corporeo medio segundo a equacao da reta, etc. Se a analise for prosseguir com uma ANOVA ou outra regressao, deve ser mais appropriado incluir o tamanho do corpo na mesma analise, como uma variavel independente adicional. Isso permite identificar interacoes e sobreposicao das variaveis independentes e tende a permitir explicar uma porcao maior da variacao observada. Para maiores informacoes sobre a analise unificada, consulte algum livro de bioestatistica, no capitulo que trata de MANOVA, regressao multipla ou ANCOVA. Boa sorte, Marcos Fausto Nomura wrote: > Olá a todos, > Estou fazendo algumas análises da relação do tamanho corporal de uma > comunidade de anuros com a frequência dominante do canto de anúncio. > Como o esperado, encontrei uma relação negativa, quanto maior o > tamanho do animal, menor a frquência dominante. Meu segundo > passo seria remover o efeito tamanho da frequência dominante > para refazer as análises. Para isso, usei a equação da reta obtida > pela regressão linear e substitui os valores do frequencia dominante > na equação. Entretanto, o efeito final foi que a relação ficou > perfeitamente linear. O procedimento para remoção do efeito do tamanho > na frequencia dominante que eu utilizei está correto? > Abraços a todos e espero que possam me ajudar, > > Fausto Nomura > Lab. de Ecologia Animal, UNESP/São José do Rio Preto > PPG Zoologia, UNESP/Rio Claro > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Marcos Gridi-Papp, PhD mg...@uc... University of California Department of Physiological Science 621 Charles E. Young Drive S. 90095 Los Angeles, California, USA ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
From: Fausto N. <fau...@ya...> - 2007-11-21 15:46:38
|
Ol=C3=A1 a todos,=0AEstou fazendo algumas an=C3=A1lises da rela=C3=A7=C3=A3= o do tamanho corporal de uma comunidade de anuros com a frequ=C3=AAncia dom= inante do canto de an=C3=BAncio. Como o esperado, encontrei uma rela=C3=A7= =C3=A3o negativa, quanto maior o tamanho do animal, menor a frqu=C3=AAncia = dominante. Meu segundo passo seria remover o efeito tamanho da frequ=C3=AAn= cia dominante para refazer as an=C3=A1lises. Para isso, usei a equa=C3=A7= =C3=A3o da reta obtida pela regress=C3=A3o linear e substitui os valores do= frequencia dominante na equa=C3=A7=C3=A3o. Entretanto, o efeito final foi = que a rela=C3=A7=C3=A3o ficou perfeitamente linear. O procedimento para rem= o=C3=A7=C3=A3o do efeito do tamanho na frequencia dominante que eu utilizei= est=C3=A1 correto?=0AAbra=C3=A7os a todos e espero que possam me ajudar,= =0A =0AFausto Nomura=0ALab. de Ecologia Animal, UNESP/S=C3=A3o Jos=C3=A9 do= Rio Preto=0APPG Zoologia, UNESP/Rio Claro=0A=0A=0A=0A----- Mensagem origin= al ----=0ADe: Marcos Gridi-Papp <mg...@uc...>=0APara: soundruler-bioacu= st...@li...=0AEnviadas: S=C3=A1bado, 6 de Maio de 2006 19:4= 7:27=0AAssunto: [Soundruler-bioacustica] congresso=0A=0A1a Reuniao Latino A= mericana da Animal Behavior Society=0A=0A O comite de assuntos latinoame= ricanos da Animal Behavior Society =0Aesta organizando um encontro em Xalap= a, Mexico, de 7 a 11 de outubro de =0A2006.=0A A ideia =C3=A9 promover a= reuniao fora dos EUA para reduzir os custos e a =0Aburocracia envolvida em= viagem e vistos, facilitando assim a =0Aparticipacao de estudantes.=0A = Maiores informacoes abaixo.=0A=0A------------------------------------------= --------------------=0A=0A1st Latin American Animal Behavior Society Meetin= g=0AOctober 7-11, 2006=0A1st Announcement=0A=0AThe Latin-American Affairs C= ommittee (LAAC) of the Animal Behavior =0ASociety is organizing a fall meet= ing in Xalapa, Mexico, in order to =0Apromote participation of animal behav= iorists from the whole continent in =0Athe Society, the main objective of t= he LAAC.=0A=0AThe cost of traveling from abroad, along with increasing diff= iculties to =0Aobtain a US visa since 9/11, make it hard for those in LA co= untries to =0Aenjoy the experience of our regular summer meetings. This is = especially =0Athe case for graduate students, those in greater need of such= =0Aexperience, but also those with fewer resources and lower chances to = =0Aqualify for a US visa.=0A=0AThe meeting is an attempt to bring the socie= ty closer to the rest of the =0Acontinent, and therefore it is aimed to att= ract attendance from both =0Asides of the US-MEX border. The proposed forma= t is a small meeting, =0Asimilar to regional ABS meetings (50-100 people), = with single talk =0Asessions and a poster session.=0A=0ATalks and posters w= ill be in English, the official language of the =0ASociety, although questi= ons at the talk sessions could be formulated in =0ASpanish or Portuguese, a= nd translated by the moderator if necessary. The =0Aabove is intended to pr= omote participation of non-fluent English =0Aspeakers, but keeping it attra= ctive to English speakers as well, which =0Aoverall will promote an experie= nce and a challenge as close as possible =0Ato those of the regular meeting= .=0A=0AMexico seemed a natural place to organize this first meeting, given = the =0Alarge group of animal behaviorists in the country, and its =0Asteppi= ng-stone location, which makes it more accessible from Canada and =0Athe US= , especially after the success of the Oaxaca meeting. This, =0Ahowever, sti= ll makes it hard for those from further south in terms of =0Acosts and even= in terms of visas. The plan is to organize future =0Ameetings in other cou= ntries once the project has gained momentum, =0Aprobably every two years.= =0A=0AThe host institution will be the Instituto de Ecolog=C3=ADa, A.C., co= -host of =0Athe 2004 Oaxaca meeting, located in the colonial city of Xalapa= . The =0Aarea is serviced by one domestic airport (JAL), and the Veracruz = =0AInternational Airport (VER) with daily flights from several US =0Alocati= ons. The area is surrounded by the cloud forest of the eastern =0Aslope of = the Sierra Madre Oriental. A biodiversity hotspot, famous for =0Aits exuber= ant vegetation, excellent coffee, delicious "mole", =0Aarcheological sites,= and extremely friendly and liberal inhabitants, it =0Ais a perfect locatio= n for a meeting like this. You can visit the =0Afollowing pages for a quick= tour.=0A=0Ahttp://www.xalapa.gob.mx/turismo/atractivos.htm=0Ahttp://www.ca= rnaval.com/cityguides/veracruz/xalapa.htm=0Ahttp://www.mexconnect.com/mex_/= travel/acogan/acjalapa.html=0A=0AArrival and registration will take place o= n October 7th, talk and poster =0Asessions will be held on October 8-10, op= tional field trips will be =0Aarranged on October 11.=0A=0AWe will soon sen= d you a second announcement with more detailed =0Ainformation on talk and p= oster submissions, travel, meeting location, =0Ahousing, registration cost = and procedure, field trips, banquet, and =0Aother optional activities. You = can also see the following page for =0Aupdates http://www.ecologia.edu.mx/l= aabs.=0A=0AFor obvious reasons we expect a large Mexican attendance, but al= so from =0Aother countries in the rest of LA. We also anticipate special in= terest =0Afrom those in the US and Canada who do field work south of the bo= rder, =0Aor are interested in establishing contact with LA scientists. In a= ny =0Acase, we will appreciate your forward of this message to any colleagu= e =0Ayou think may be interested in attending.=0A=0AThe LAAC is aware that = the dates make it hard for many to travel during =0Athe regular semester, b= ut this was unavoidable for several reasons. We =0Aexpect that those intere= sted will make an effort; we promise you will =0Anot be disappointed.=0A=0A= Rogelio Mac=C3=ADas Robyn Hudson=0ALAAC chair and co-hos= t LAAC member and co-host=0A=0A____________________________=0ALa= tin American Affairs Committee=0AAnimal Behavior Society=0A=0A=0A----------= ---------------------------------------------=0AUsing Tomcat but need to do= more? Need to support web services, security?=0AGet stuff done quickly wit= h pre-integrated technology to make your job easier=0ADownload IBM WebSpher= e Application Server v.1.0.1 based on Apache Geronimo=0Ahttp://sel.as-us.fa= lkag.net/sel?cmd=3Dlnk&kid0709&bid&3057&dat1642=0A_________________________= ______________________=0ASoundruler-bioacustica mailing list=0ASoundruler-b= ioa...@li...=0Ahttps://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/list= info/soundruler-bioacustica=0A=0A=0A Abra sua conta no Yahoo! Mail, o = =C3=BAnico sem limite de espa=C3=A7o para armazenamento!=0Ahttp://br.mail.y= ahoo.com/ |
From: Marcos Gridi-P. <mg...@uc...> - 2007-09-30 02:00:02
|
Acabamos de lancar o Vibrotoolbox (http://vibrotoolbox.sf.net). Esta é uma ferramenta para pesquisa e ensino de vibrometria. Ele oferece uma maneira interativa de descrever respostas a estímulos vibratórios e de analisar direcionalidade. Ele também pode ser usado para testar equipamento como placas de som, microfones, autofalantes e amplificadores em termos de amplitude, atraso, resposta de freqüencia, desvio de corrente contínua, etc. O Vibrotoolbox é um programa livre com código aberto. Assim como conhecimento científico, ele á disponibilizado para todos usarem, criticarem, adaptarem as suas necessidades e melhorarem. O programa funciona com várias placas de digitalização de alta precisão mas também trabalha com placas de som comuns que vem nos computadores, e pode ser usado com uma ampla gama de sensores e autofalantes. Como o SoundRuler, ele incorpora uma esquema online de traducao colaborativa. A traducao para o portugues esta apenas comecando e a sua ajuda sera muito bem vinda. -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Marcos Gridi-Papp, PhD mg...@uc... University of California Department of Physiological Science 621 Charles E. Young Drive S. 90095 Los Angeles, California, USA ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
From: Marcos Gridi-P. <mg...@uc...> - 2007-08-25 02:18:24
|
Doutorado com bolsa na Escocia para estudar populacoes de baleias atraves de monitoramento acustico. Inscricoes ate 31 de Agosto. ======================================================= The Sea Mammal Research Unit at the University of St Andrews are offering a funded PhD on the use of passive acoustic monitoring of beaked whales and other deep divers for population assessment and mitigation. A brief description of the project can be found at <http://biology.st-andrews.ac.uk/projectSummaries.aspx?psr=79> While more details of the proposed work is at http://www.st-andrews.ac.uk/~jg20/ <http://www.st-andrews.ac.uk/%7Ejg20/> General information on PhD study in the School of Biology at St Andrews is provided at <http://biology.st-andrews.ac.uk/pageset.aspx?psr=68> For application procedures follow links from http://biology.st-andrews.ac.uk/pageset.aspx?psr=77 The closing date for applications is 31st August. Douglas Gillespie dg...@st... or Jonathan Gordon jg...@st... can provide additional information if necessary. -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Marcos Gridi-Papp, PhD mg...@uc... University of California Department of Physiological Science 621 Charles E. Young Drive S. 90095 Los Angeles, California, USA ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
From: Marcos Gridi-P. <mg...@uc...> - 2007-04-09 17:49:24
|
Posdoc em Leiden, Holanda para estudar o mecanismo de vocalizacao em aves. Inscricoes ate 15 de abril de 2007. ================================================================= Postdoctoral position in bird vocalisations, Leiden University Human speech conveys language, and much research effort concerns the production and perception of acoustic features that encode linguistic meaning in speech. An important role is fulfilled by formants. Formant patterns result from acoustic resonances of the vocal tract, the characteristics of which are rapidly modulated using articulators such as the tongue, lips, and soft palate. Studies of birdsong have hardly addressed the role of formants, although several findings indicate their presence. The proposed project aims to provide a comprehensive analysis of formant mechanisms in birds. It will address the following questions: 1) To what extent do vocal tract resonances cause formant patterns in natural bird vocalizations, and how do vocal tract articulators modulate such patterns? 2) What are the perceptual sensitivities of birds to formant patterns in natural bird vocalizations? 3) Are formant patterns in natural bird vocalizations affected by vocal production learning? The project will involve morphological, physiological and bioacoustical analyses and experimental studies on the vocalization systems of zebra finches and budgerigars, together with experiments on the perception of formant variants. The project is based in the research group Behavioural Biology, but will be carried out in close collaboration with Dr Gabriël Beckers, MPI for Ornithology, Seewiesen. The Behavioural Biology group is an active, internationally oriented research group with a strong focus on (vocal) communication in animals. More information: http://biology.leidenuniv.nl/ibl/S8 Requirements: Candidates are expected to have an MSc (drs) degree in Biology, Biomedical Science, Cognitive Neuroscience or other relevant discipline; to have a strong interest in experimental and interdisciplinary animal behaviour studies, and to be interested in international collaboration. We have a strong preference for candidates interested in a PhD project, but will consider a postdoc if no suitable PhD-candidate is available. Appointment: The appointment is for a period of 3 years and 9 months (2 years 9 months for a postdoc) and is expected to lead to completion of a dissertation. The gross monthly salary for a PhD candidate is €1956 in the first year and increases progressively each year to €2502 in the fourth year. Salary and fringe benefits conform to the Collective Employment Agreement for Dutch Universities. We hope to fill the vacancy as soon as possible. Applications: Written applications, using the reference number 7-091, and including a CV with marks obtained and the names, telephone numbers and email addresses of at least two referees (who have agreed to be contacted) should be submitted to: Leiden University Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences, Human Resource Department mw L. den Hollander P.O. Box 9502 2300 RA Leiden The Netherlands Email: l.d...@sc... Closing date: 15 April 2007. Further information: prof dr Carel ten Cate Email: c.j...@bi... -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Marcos Gridi-Papp, PhD University of California Department of Physiological Science 621 Charles E. Young Drive S. 90095 Los Angeles, California, USA ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
From: Marcos Gridi-P. <mg...@uc...> - 2007-04-09 17:43:57
|
Doutorado em Leiden, Holanda, com 4 anos de bolsa para estudar aprendizado vocal em aves e criancas. Inscricoes ate 15 de abril de 2007. Maiores informacoes abaixo. ================================================================== Doctoral position in early vocal development in birds and humans, Leiden Institute for Brain and Cognition For the project: Towards the template—the early vocal development of songbirds and human infants. The aim of this interdisciplinary project is to assess the similarities in mechanisms underlying selective vocal learning in human infants and songbirds (zebra finches) by running similar experiments in both models. The project concentrates on the first phase of vocal development, that of storing a representation of the vocal input in memory. It will examine to what extend this process is guided by unlearned initial perceptual biases, what these biases look like and how the input affects the formation of a template that precedes vocal production. The project is a joint project of the research groups Behavioural Biology (Institute of Biology Leiden) (http://biology.leidenuniv.nl/ibl/S8/) and the Department of Linguistics (ULCL) at Leiden University. Requirements: Candidates are expected to have an MSc (drs) degree in Biology, Cognitive Neuroscience or other relevant discipline, and to have a strong interest in experimental and interdisciplinary studies. Experience or qualifications in working with animal models will be of advantage. Appointment: The appointment is for a period of 4 years and is expected to lead to completion of a dissertation. The gross monthly salary for a PhD candidate is €1956 in the first year and increases progressively each year to €2502 in the fourth year. Salary and fringe benefits conform to the Collective Employment Agreement for Dutch Universities. We hope to fill the vacancy as soon as possible. Applications: Written applications (mentioning reference number 7-092), including a CV with marks obtained and the names, telephone numbers and email addresses of at least two referees (who have agreed to be contacted) should be submitted to: Leiden University Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences, attn. mw L. den Hollander P.O. Box 9502 2300 RA Leiden The Netherlands Email: Email: l.d...@sc... Closing date: 15 April 2007. For further information: Prof dr Carel ten Cate, Behavioural Biology Email: c.j...@bi... Dr Claartje C. Levelt, Linguistics Email: c.c...@le... -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Marcos Gridi-Papp, PhD University of California Department of Physiological Science 621 Charles E. Young Drive S. 90095 Los Angeles, California, USA ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
From: Marcos Gridi-P. <mg...@uc...> - 2007-04-04 16:55:26
|
Oportunidade de doutorado no sul da Dinamarca com bolsa, para o estudo de ecolocacao, intensidade e direcionalidade em morcegos. Inscricoes ate 1 de maio, inicio em junho de 2007. Maiores informacoes abaixo. ====================================================================== Forwarded from Annemarie Surlykke, am...@bi...: Doctoral Position in Bat Echolocation at University of Southern Denmark, Odense, Denmark. PhD Scholarship Available: Bat echolocation, sound intensity and directionality The Graduate School on Sense organs, Nerve systems, Behavior, and Communication (SNAK), University of Southern Denmark invites applications for a PhD scholarship in research on bat echo-location with focus on intensity and directionality of echolocation signals. The scholarship is financed by FIST (Forsknings -og Innovationsstyrelsen, the Danish Agency for Science Technology and Innovation) and commences by June 2007. The position involves studying the intensity and directionality of sounds emitted by bats from different families and with different morphology, habitat and feeding behavior. The candidate will mainly be based at Institute of Biology, University of Southern Denmark, Odense, but the stipend includes a one-year research stay in another bat-lab. The project includes laboratory experiments and field work, which is planned to be carried out partly in Denmark and partly in the tropics. Applicants should be recent graduates in the field of vertebrate behavioral biology or neuroethology and preferably but not necessarily have experience in bat biology or animal bioacoustics research. The duration of the PhD contract is three years. Within the contract period, the candidate is expected to complete his/her research with publications and a dissertation. Salary will be in accordance with the agreement between the Danish Ministry of Finance and AC (the Danish Confederation of Professional Associations). Before applying, candidates are strongly encouraged to consult the full project description at http://www.snak.biology.sdu.dk. For further information please contact Assoc. Prof. Annemarie Surlykke, Institute of Biology, SDU; e-mail: am...@bi.... The closing date for applications is May 1. 2007. To apply, candidates should send an e-mail that includes an application, CV (with a brief description of research interests, previous employment, and publication list), documentation of academic degrees, reprints of published articles, and names and contact information for three referees to: ly...@bi.... You can also send a hard copy application in three duplicates to: Graduate School SNAK, Institute of Biology, Campusvej 55, DK-5230 Odense M, Denmark. Selection of the candidate for the stipend will be made by an evaluation committee. Subsequently, the successful candidate will have to be enrolled as a PhD student at the University of Southern Denmark (for procedures see: http://www1.sdu.dk/Nat/fak/phd/index.php?lang=en) -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Marcos Gridi-Papp, PhD University of California Department of Physiological Science 621 Charles E. Young Drive S. 90095 Los Angeles, California, USA ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
From: Marcos Gridi-P. <mg...@uc...> - 2007-03-14 05:56:38
|
Uma nova versao do SoundRuler (0.9.6.0) esta disponivel em http://soundruler.sf.net/oldsite/download-br.net.htm. A lista de alteracoes esta em (http://soundruler.sf.net). De analise manual a graficos de alta resolucao, playback em camera lenta e espectrogramas coloridos, essa versao traz uma larga gama de novidades. Marcos ----------------------------------------------------------------------- Sound Ruler é uma ferramenta para análise, produção de gráficos e ensino de bioacústica. O programa é gratuito e tem o código aberto. Sua abordagem visual interativa traz o melhor de dois mundos: o controle de uma análise manual e a objetividade e velocidade de uma análise automatizada. O Sound Ruler permite que sons simples sejam analisados rapidamente e em grande detalhe, pulso por pulso para estudos de variação populacional. ----------------------------------------------------------------------- -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Marcos Gridi-Papp, PhD mg...@uc... University of California Department of Physiological Science 621 Charles E. Young Drive S. 90095 Los Angeles, California, USA ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
From: Marcos Gridi-P. <mg...@uc...> - 2006-09-01 04:55:00
|
===================================== Arquivo sonoro Humboldt-University ===================================== The Animal Sound Archive at the Humboldt-University Berlin has a new homepage. The new address is: http://www.tierstimmen.org. Free access to the metadata of our database is available. ===================================== Versao nova do Raven ===================================== Raven 1.3 beta 1 is available for download at http://RavenSoundSoftware.com/. Features added for this beta focus on extensible multi-channel audio input device support, multi-channel recording, 24-bit recording on Macintosh, support for NI-DAQ and ASIO devices on Windows, recorder clip exporting, new measurements as seen in Canary, and a beamforming view for determining bearing in multi-channel recordings. ===================================== Versao nova do Avisoft ===================================== Avisoft-SASLab Pro, version 4.39 http://www.avisoft.com Avisoft-RECORDER, version 2.97 provides various improved triggering options and a versatile playback tool. It supports 16 and 24 bit multichannel audio interfaces, NI-DAQ and NI-DAQmx, DataTranslation, MeasurementComputing data acquisition devices and the Avisoft-UltraSoundGate hardware (http://www.ultrasoundgate.com). ====================================== Fontes: (asa.aip.org/ani_bioac/ABbioList.html) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Marcos Gridi-Papp, PhD University of California Department of Physiological Science 621 Charles E. Young Drive S. 90095 Los Angeles, California, USA ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
From: Marcos Gridi-P. <mg...@uc...> - 2006-09-01 04:45:17
|
Tres reunioes interessantes para o proximo ano. ==================================================================== Bioacoustics 2007 - Fourth IOA International Conference on Bio-Acoustics 10-12th April 2007 Holywell Park, Loughborough University, UK If you only get to one conference in 2007 - make this the one! Bioacoustics2007 will be the fourth in a series organised by the Institute of Acoustics covering bio-acoustics and bio-sonar. The purpose of the meeting will be to review the present state of this rapidly evolving subject area, to report on new developments and to examine future trends. Equal emphasis will be given to papers dealing with underwater, land-based and airborne studies, covering work on the bio-acoustics of cetaceans, bats, insects and birds. Keynote speakers will include Dorian Houser (Biomimetica) on dolphin sonar, Gareth Jones (Bristol University) on bat echolocation, Barbara Webb (Edinburgh University) on insect acoustics and Robert Dooling (University of Maryland) on bird acoustics. Added attractions will be an after-dinner talk by Richard Ranft, head of technical services at the British Library, illustrated with examples of bioacoustics recordings from the BL collections, and a bat-walk - on opportunity to try out some of the bat detectors that manufacturers will be exhibiting. Further details and the call for papers are available from the conference web site: http://bioacoustics2007.lboro.ac.uk ==================================================================== We are pleased to announce the 2nd international conference and exhibition on UNDERWATER ACOUSTIC MEASUREMENTS: TECHNOLOGIES AND RESULTS, which will be held on Crete, Greece, during the days 25th through 29th June, 2007. http://www.uam2007.gr It is our hope that this conference is of interest to you, and we are looking forward to welcoming you to Crete in June 2007. Yours sincerely, John Papadakis and Leif Bjorno Conference Secretariat Yiota Rigopoulou IACM/FORTH P.O Box 1385 71005 Heraklion Crete Greece Tel: +30 2810 391805, 391800 Fax: +30 2810 391761 e-mail: in...@ua... ==================================================================== I am organizing the following special session which has been approved for the IEEE-sponsored International Symposium on Multimedia, December 11-13, 2006 in San Diego, CA: Remote Sensors for Audio Processing Proceedings of the conference will be published by the IEEE and will be widely available through IEEE's Explore database. I would like to attract a number of submissions from bioacousticians; one of my hopes is to provide an opportunity for increased discussion between bioacousticians and computer scientists & engineers. I would encourage people to consider submitting a paper to this special session. Complete papers of up to 8 pages should be submitted by August 8, 2006. Topics of interest include: * Audio classification and detection tasks for remote sensors (speech, bioacoustics, auditory scene analysis, etc.) * Deployment issues * Power management * Networking/Storage/Data management * Array processing * Remote audio sensors in challenging environments * Applications of remote sensors with a significant audio component Complete details on the special session and links to the conference can be found at http://www.rohan.sdsu.edu/%7Emroch/ISM2006RemoteAudio.html Hope to see you in San Diego, Marie Roch -- Marie Roch Assistant Professor of Computer Science San Diego State University http://www.rohan.sdsu.edu/~mroch Tel: 619 594-5830 Fax: 619 594-6746 mr...@sc... ==================================================================== Fontes: (asa.aip.org/ani_bioac/ABbioList.html) -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Marcos Gridi-Papp, PhD University of California Department of Physiological Science 621 Charles E. Young Drive S. 90095 Los Angeles, California, USA ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
From: Marcos Gridi-P. <mg...@uc...> - 2006-05-06 22:47:29
|
1a Reuniao Latino Americana da Animal Behavior Society O comite de assuntos latinoamericanos da Animal Behavior Society=20 esta organizando um encontro em Xalapa, Mexico, de 7 a 11 de outubro de=20 2006. A ideia =E9 promover a reuniao fora dos EUA para reduzir os custos e = a=20 burocracia envolvida em viagem e vistos, facilitando assim a=20 participacao de estudantes. Maiores informacoes abaixo. -------------------------------------------------------------- 1st Latin American Animal Behavior Society Meeting October 7-11, 2006 1st Announcement The Latin-American Affairs Committee (LAAC) of the Animal Behavior=20 Society is organizing a fall meeting in Xalapa, Mexico, in order to=20 promote participation of animal behaviorists from the whole continent in=20 the Society, the main objective of the LAAC. The cost of traveling from abroad, along with increasing difficulties to=20 obtain a US visa since 9/11, make it hard for those in LA countries to=20 enjoy the experience of our regular summer meetings. This is especially=20 the case for graduate students, those in greater need of such=20 experience, but also those with fewer resources and lower chances to=20 qualify for a US visa. The meeting is an attempt to bring the society closer to the rest of the=20 continent, and therefore it is aimed to attract attendance from both=20 sides of the US-MEX border. The proposed format is a small meeting,=20 similar to regional ABS meetings (50-100 people), with single talk=20 sessions and a poster session. Talks and posters will be in English, the official language of the=20 Society, although questions at the talk sessions could be formulated in=20 Spanish or Portuguese, and translated by the moderator if necessary. The=20 above is intended to promote participation of non-fluent English=20 speakers, but keeping it attractive to English speakers as well, which=20 overall will promote an experience and a challenge as close as possible=20 to those of the regular meeting. Mexico seemed a natural place to organize this first meeting, given the=20 large group of animal behaviorists in the country, and its=20 stepping-stone location, which makes it more accessible from Canada and=20 the US, especially after the success of the Oaxaca meeting. This,=20 however, still makes it hard for those from further south in terms of=20 costs and even in terms of visas. The plan is to organize future=20 meetings in other countries once the project has gained momentum,=20 probably every two years. The host institution will be the Instituto de Ecolog=EDa, A.C., co-host o= f=20 the 2004 Oaxaca meeting, located in the colonial city of Xalapa. The=20 area is serviced by one domestic airport (JAL), and the Veracruz=20 International Airport (VER) with daily flights from several US=20 locations. The area is surrounded by the cloud forest of the eastern=20 slope of the Sierra Madre Oriental. A biodiversity hotspot, famous for=20 its exuberant vegetation, excellent coffee, delicious "mole",=20 archeological sites, and extremely friendly and liberal inhabitants, it=20 is a perfect location for a meeting like this. You can visit the=20 following pages for a quick tour. http://www.xalapa.gob.mx/turismo/atractivos.htm http://www.carnaval.com/cityguides/veracruz/xalapa.htm http://www.mexconnect.com/mex_/travel/acogan/acjalapa.html Arrival and registration will take place on October 7th, talk and poster=20 sessions will be held on October 8-10, optional field trips will be=20 arranged on October 11. We will soon send you a second announcement with more detailed=20 information on talk and poster submissions, travel, meeting location,=20 housing, registration cost and procedure, field trips, banquet, and=20 other optional activities. You can also see the following page for=20 updates http://www.ecologia.edu.mx/laabs. For obvious reasons we expect a large Mexican attendance, but also from=20 other countries in the rest of LA. We also anticipate special interest=20 from those in the US and Canada who do field work south of the border,=20 or are interested in establishing contact with LA scientists. In any=20 case, we will appreciate your forward of this message to any colleague=20 you think may be interested in attending. The LAAC is aware that the dates make it hard for many to travel during=20 the regular semester, but this was unavoidable for several reasons. We=20 expect that those interested will make an effort; we promise you will=20 not be disappointed. Rogelio Mac=EDas Robyn Hudson LAAC chair and co-host LAAC member and co-host ____________________________ Latin American Affairs Committee Animal Behavior Society |
From: Marcos Gridi-P. <mg...@uc...> - 2006-05-06 22:20:40
|
Caros colegas, Com o crescimento constante do numero de publicacoes e de revistas=20 cientificas, manter-se atualizado exige buscar e filtrar cada vez mais=20 material. Uma maneira de agilizar o processo =E9 compartilhar o resultado do=20 esforco de triagem com colegas interessados no mesmo assunto. Se cada usuario da lista escolher uma revista e postar os artigos=20 envolvendo acustica a cada numero (quando houverem), todos nos=20 beneficiaremos de uma lista bastante completa dos novos avancos. Sem=20 compromisso nem pressa. Alem disso, referencias anteriores podem ser facilmente encontradas=20 fazendo buscas nos arquivos da lista=20 (http://sourceforge.net/mailarchive/forum.php?forum=3Dsoundruler-bioacust= ica),=20 que perpetuam o esforco de triagem. Como outro assunto, gostaria de sugerir que os usuarios da lista=20 mandem duvidas envolvendo acustica para o endereco email da lista, ao=20 inves de meu endereco pessoal. Minha resposta nao depende do endereco.=20 Enviando para a lista o colega pode receber comentarios e experiencias=20 de outros usuarios da lista. Alem disso, outros leitores podem se=20 beneficiar da discussao. A lista nao deve ser vista como um espaco formal para exibicao de=20 conhecimento, mas como uma ferramenta informal para agilizar a nossa=20 communicacao e de maneira geral nos poupar tempo. --=20 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Marcos Gridi-Papp, PhD mg...@uc... University of California Department of Physiological Science 621 Charles E. Young Drive S. 90095 Los Angeles, California, USA ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
From: Marcos Gridi-P. <mg...@uc...> - 2006-05-06 21:46:17
|
Publicacoes Recentes Esta lista nao pretende ser completa ou selecionar o melhor. =C9 apenas um esforco de divulgacao para facilitar aos usuarios o acesso a novas pesquisas em bioacustica. Fontes: (asa.aip.org/ani_bioac/ABbioList.html) -------------------------------------------------------------------------= - Animal Behaviour, 71 (3,4) (http://www.elsevier.com/wps/find/journaldescription.cws_home/622782/desc= ription#description) -------------------------------------------------------------------------= - num. 3 Urban bioacoustics: it's not just noise. P.S. Warren, M. Katti, M.=20 Ermann, A. Brazel. pp 491-502 Changing territories, changing tunes: male loons, Gavia immer, change=20 their vocalizations when they change territories. C. Walcott, J.N.=20 Mager, W. Piper. pp 673-683 num. 4 Montezuma oropendolas modify a component of song constrained by body=20 size during vocal contests J.J. Price, S.M. Earnshaw, M.S. Webster pp 799-807 Multiple functions to duet singing: hidden conflicts and apparent cooperation L. Marshall-Ball, N. Mann, P.J.B. Slater pp 823-831 -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- Behaviour, 143: 2,3,4 (http://ariel.ingentaselect.com/vl=3D950353/cl=3D126/nw=3D1/rpsv/cw/www/b= rill/00057959/v141n9/contp1-1.htm) -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- num. 2 Voigt, C, S Leitner & M Gahr (2006) Repertoire and structure of duet and=20 solo songs in cooperatively breeding white-browed sparrow weavers.=20 Behaviour 143: 159-182. Harris, TR (2006) Within- and among-male variation in roaring by black=20 and white colobus monkeys (Colobus guereza): What does it reveal about=20 function? Behaviour 143: 197-218. Gros-Louis, J, DJ White, AP King & MJ West (2006) Do juvenile males=20 affect adult males' reproductive success in brown-headed cowbirds=20 (Molothrus ater)? Behaviour 143: 219-237. Tougaard, J & N Eriksen (2006) Analysing differences among animal songs=20 quantitatively by means of the Levenshtein distance measure. Behaviour=20 143: 239-252. Eckerle, KP & CF Thompson (2006) Mate choice in house wrens: nest=20 cavities trump male characteristics. Behaviour 143: 253-271. num. 3 Rossi-Santos, MR & J Podos (2006) Latitudinal variation in whistle=20 structure of the estuarine dolphin Sotalia guianensis. Behaviour 143:=20 347-364. Laidre, ME (2006) Manipulation without mind-reading: information=20 suppression and leakage during food discovery by mandrills (Mandrillus=20 sphinx). Behaviour 143: 365-392. num. 4 Castellano, S & A Rosso(2006) Variation in call temporal properties and=20 female preferences in Hyla intermedia. Behaviour 143: 405-424. Hall, ML (2006) Convergent vocal strategies of males and females are=20 consistent with a cooperative function of duetting in Australian=20 magpie-larks. Behaviour 143: 425-449. Hale, AM (2006) The structure, context and functions of group singing in=20 black-breasted wood-quail (Odontophorus leucolaemus). Behaviour 143:=20 511-533. -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- Behavioural Ecology and Sociobiology, 59 (6) (http://www.springerlink.com/link.asp?id=3D100464) -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- Close-range acoustic signaling and mate choice in Hawaiian crickets=20 (Gryllidae: Laupala) p. 770 Tamra C. Mendelson, Kerry L. Shaw Multiple mate choice criteria and the importance of age for male mating=20 success in the microhylid frog, Cophixalus ornatus p. 786 Adam Felton, Ross A. Alford, Annika M. Felton, Lin Schwarzkopf No evidence for female mate choice based on genetic similarity in the=20 t=FAngara frog Physalaemus pustulosus p. 796 Kathrin P. Lampert, Ximena E. Bernal, A. Stanley Rand, Ulrich G.=20 Mueller, Michael J. Ryan Wild elephant (Loxodonta africana) breeding herds respond to=20 artificially transmitted seismic stimuli p. 842 C. E. O=92Connell-Rodwell, J. D. Wood, T. C. Rodwell, S. Puria, S. R.=20 Partan, R. Keefe, D. Shriver, B. T. Arnason, L. A. Hart -------------------------------------------------------------------------= - Ethology 112 (2,4,5) (http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/journal.asp?ref=3D0179-1613) -------------------------------------------------------------------------= - num. 2 Individual Male Calling Pattern and Male Mating Success in the European=20 Treefrog (/Hyla arborea/): Is there Evidence for Directional or=20 Stabilizing Selection on Male Calling Behaviour? Thomas W.P. Friedl pp.=20 116 - 126 num. 4 Functionally Referential Alarm Calls in Tamarins (Saguinus fuscicollis=20 and Saguinus mystax) =96 Evidence from Playback Experiments Janna Kirchhof, Kurt Hammerschmidt pp 346 - 354 Red Squirrels (Sciurus vulgaris) Respond to Alarm Calls of Eurasian Jays=20 (Garrulus glandarius) Christoph Randler pp 411 - 416 num. 5 The Onset of Song Learning and Song Tutor Selection in Fledgling Zebra=20 Finches Annabelle Roper, Richard Zann pp. 458 - 470 -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- J. Acoustical Society of America, 119(3) (http://asa.aip.org/jasa.html) -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- [obituary] William Alfred Watkins, 1926--2004. p. 1295 Classification of vocalizations of killer whales using dynamic time=20 warping. Judith C. Brown, Andrea Hodgins-Davis, Patrick J. O. Miller.=20 pp. EL34--EL40 Acoustic detection and classification of microchiroptera using machine=20 learning: Lessons learned from automatic speech recognition. Mark D.=20 Skowronski, John G. Harris. pp. 1817--1833 Information entropy of humpback whale songs. Ryuji Suzuki, John R. Buck,=20 Peter L. Tyack. pp. 1849--1866 Acoustic features of objects matched by an echolocating bottlenose=20 dolphin. Caroline M. DeLong, Whitlow W. L. Au, David W. Lemonds, Heidi=20 E. Harley,Herbert L. Roitblat pp. 1867--1879 num. 4 Perception of complex sounds in budgerigars (Melopsittacus undulatus) wit= h temporary hearing loss Robert J. Dooling, Brenda M. Ryals, Micheal L. Dent, Tracy L. Reid The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America Volume 119, pp. 2524--2532, 2006 num. 5 Accuracy of an acoustic location system for monitoring the position of duetting songbirds in tropical forest. Daniel J. Mennill, John M. Burt,=20 Kurt M. Fristrup, Sandra L. Vehrencamp. pp. 2832--2839 Using self-organizing maps to recognize acoustic units associated with information content in animal vocalizations. John Placer, C. N.=20 Slobodchikoff, Jason Burns, Jeffrey Placer, Ryan Middleton. pp. 3140--314= 6 Acoustic structures in the alarm calls of Gunnison's prairie dogs C. N. Slobodchikoff, J. Placer. pp. 3153--3160 Using an artificial neural network to classify black-capped chickadee (Poecile atricapillus) call note types. Michael R. W. Dawson, Isabelle=20 Charrier, Christopher B. Sturdy. pp. 3161--3172 Nonconstant quality of auditory filters in the porpoises, Phocoena=20 phocoena and Neophocaena phocaenoides (Cetacea, Phocoenidae) Vladimir V. Popov, Alexander Ya. Supin, Ding Wang, Kexiong Wang. pp.=20 3173--3180 Comparison of in-air evoked potential and underwater behavioral hearing thresholds in four bottlenose dolphins ([bold Tursiops truncatus]) James J. Finneran, Dorian S. Houser. pp. 3181--3192 -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- Journal of Experimental Biology, 209 (http://jeb.biologists.org) -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- Seismic signal production in a wolf spider: parallel versus serial=20 multi-component signals. Damian O. Elias, Norman Lee, Eileen A. Hebets,=20 and Andrew C. Mason. J Exp Biol 2006;209 1074-1084 Flight and echolocation behaviour of whiskered bats commuting along a hedgerow: range-dependent sonar signal design, Doppler tolerance and evidence for `acoustic focussing'. Marc W. Holderied, Gareth Jones, and=20 Otto von Helversen J Exp Biol 2006;209 1816-1826 ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Nature 440,441 (http://www.nature.com) ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Ultrasonic communication in frogs. Albert S. Feng, Peter M. Narins,=20 Chun-He Xu, Wen-Yu Lin, Zu-Lin Yu, Qiang Qiu, Zhi-Min Xu and Jun-Xian=20 Shen. Nature 440:333-336 Animal communication: Complex call production in the t=FAngara frog M. Gridi-Papp, A. S. Rand and M. J. Ryan. Nature 441:38. -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- Marine Mammal Science, 22(1,2) (http://www.marinemammalogy.org/mms.htm) -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- num. 1 Woodward, B.L. and J.P. Winn. 2006. Apparent lateralized behavior in=20 gray whales feeding off the central British Columbia coast. Marine=20 Mammal Science 22(1): 64-73. num. 2 Teilmann, J. et al. 2006. Reactions of captive harbor porpoises (Phocoena phocoena) to pinger-like sounds. Marine Mammal Science 22(2): 240-260. ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Proc. of the Royal Society of London: Biological Sciences, 273 (1588 a=20 1590) (http://www.journals.royalsoc.ac.uk) ------------------------------------------------------------------------- num. 1588 Eben Goodale, Sarath W. Kotagama. Context-dependent vocal mimicry in a=20 passerine bird p. 875 num. 1589 Phylogenetic and ecological determinants of the neotropical dawn chorus=20 p. 999 Karl S. Berg, Robb T. Brumfield, Victor Apanius num. 1590 Reproductive character displacement generates reproductive isolation=20 among conspecific populations: an artificial neural network study p.=20 1361 Karin S. Pfennig, Michael J. Ryan -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- Outros -------------------------------------------------------------------------= -----=20 Kastelein, R.A., Jennings, N., Verboom, W.C, de Haan, D., and=20 Schooneman, N.M. (2006) Differences in the response of a striped dolphin=20 (Stenella coeruleoalba) and a harbour porpoise (Phocoena phocoena) to an=20 acoustic alarm. Marine Environmental Research 61, 363-378. Mercado, E., III, Herman, L. M., & Pack, A. A. (2005). Song copying by humpback whales: Themes and variations. Animal Cognition, 8, 93-102. Branstetter, B.K. & Mercado, E., III (2006). Sound localization by cetaceans. International Journal of Comparative Psychology, 19, 26-61. Macias, Silvio, Emanuel C. Mora, and Adianez Garcia, 2006. Acoustic=20 identification of Mormoopid bats: A survey during the evening exodus.=20 Journal of Mammalogy 87(2):324-330. --=20 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Marcos Gridi-Papp, PhD mg...@uc... University of California Department of Physiological Science 621 Charles E. Young Drive S. 90095 Los Angeles, California, USA ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
From: Marcos Gridi-P. <mg...@uc...> - 2006-05-06 18:42:56
|
O projeto R (http://www.r-project.org/) =E9 uma iniciativa de softwar= e=20 livre que produz o renomado pacote estatistico R (similar ao S-plus). Seewave =E9 uma biblioteca de scripts para bioacustica, desenvolvida = em R. Maiores informacoes abaixo. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- I would like to draw your attention on 'Seewave', a new tool for sound=20 analysis. This is a free library written in R language (http://www.r-project.org/). It is available on a wide variety of UNIX platforms and similar systems=20 (including FreeBSD and Linux), Windows and MacOS. The main functions are: oscillogram, envelope, 2D/3D spectrograms, AM=20 spectral analysis, automatic silence/signal durations, spectrum,=20 dominant frequency, instantaneous frequency by zero-crossing,=20 fundamental frequency by autocorrelation, cross-correlation between=20 envelopes, cross-correlation between spectra, covariance between=20 spectrograms, sinusoid generator. Seewave benefits all R high-level graphical specifications: it is=20 possible to fully modify the graphics, and to combine the graphical=20 displays of different functions in a single multi-framed output.=20 Graphics can be saved in several formats, including pdf, with high=20 resolution. Figures are ready-to-edit. Users can modify the functions, add new ones and run batch processes. A pps file showing the screen shots and one 3D animation can be=20 downloaded at the following link: ftp://ftp.u-psud.fr/pub/from-upsud/8b2e06b0/seewavedemo.pps For people already used to R, see the 'R' package link with the pdf=20 documentation: http://cran.r-project.org/src/contrib/Descriptions/seewave.html Please feel free to contact us for any inquiries, J=E9r=F4me Sueur Thierry Aubin Caroline Simonis-Sueur _________________________ J=E9r=F4me Sueur NAMC-CNRS UMR 8620 B=E2t. 446, Universit=E9 Paris XI F-91405 Orsay Cedex Tel +33 (0)1 69 15 68 26 Fax +33 (0)1 69 15 77 26 Jer...@ib... http://www.cb.u-psud.fr/ |
From: Marcos Gridi-P. <mg...@uc...> - 2006-03-08 03:33:35
|
Emprego como t=E9cnico em acustica. Um programa do sistema de parques= =20 nacionais americano, sediado na Universidade do Colorado=20 (http://www.nature.nps.gov/naturalsounds). Salario 27-38 mil dolares por=20 ano. Requer diploma de graduacao, de preferencia em ciencias naturais=20 alem de outras qualificacoes. Inscricoes de preferencia ate 24 de marco=20 de 2006. Nao especifica se requer cidadania. Maiores informacoes abaixo. Marcos =3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D= =3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D= =3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D I have recently moved from the Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology to this new (4 year old) program in the National Park Service (http://www.nature.nps.gov/naturalsounds/; yes, the website needs work). The Natural Sounds Program (previously the Soundscape Program) works to protect, maintain, or restore soundscape resources and values in units of the National Park System. A major research and development initiative is the development of a national network of acoustic monitoring systems. The dominant policy matters involve managing noise from vehicles, especially air tour overflights, over snow vehicles, and off road vehicles. These ne= w staff will formally be Colorado State University employees, working with the National Park Service through a CESU agreement. Please post this information where suitable applicants may see it. Thanks - Kurt Title: RAI - Acoustic Technician Employment Type: Administrative Professional College: Engineering Department: Civil Engineering Salary: $27-38,000/yr Requirements: The Dept. of Civil Engineering and National Park Service is seeking two full time Acoustic Technicians. The focus is assisting NSPC acoustic specialists in collecting and analyzing the acoustic data needed to complete park soundscape management planning. Conducting field work at park units, particularly in the western U.S., is a primary responsibility for this position which requires extensive travel. Primary duties are collecting audio data at remote field sites, extracting quantitative measures relevant to park unit management issues, and writing reports summarizing the results of acoustic monitoring projects. Bachelor degree (preferably in a natural science or resource field) or equivalent education and experience computer literacy with knowledge of software such as word processing and spreadsheets, the ability to hike while carrying a backpack (up to 25 kg), through sometimes rough terrain, hearing ability to conduct attended logging at acoustic monitoring sites, able to manage a variety of tasks and changing priorities, and the ability to communicate effectively orally and in writing. Applicants must be enthusiastic, energetic, and adaptable. Desired attributes include experience using and maintaining scientific instruments or electronics, experience with acoustical or meteorological monitoring devices, experience diagnosing and repairing equipment failures in the field, experience with hand and power tools, knowledge of database management systems, and experience with soldering. Application Deadline: 03-24-2006 To Apply: Submit letter of interest, summarizing education/experience; current resume; names, addresses, phone for 3 references; copy of college transcripts to: Sherry Caldwell, Coordinator, National Park Service, 1201 Oakridge Drive, Suite 150, Fort Collins, CO 80525. Applications will be considered until the position is filled; however, applicants should submit applications by March 24, 2006 for full consideration. Colorado State University is an equal opportunity/affirmative action employer. |
From: Marcos Gridi-P. <mg...@uc...> - 2006-02-26 00:50:32
|
Publicacoes Recentes Esta lista nao pretende ser completa ou selecionar o melhor. =C9 apenas um esforco de divulgacao para facilitar aos usuarios o acesso a novas pesquisas em bioacustica. Contribuicoes por outros usuarios sao muito bem-vindas. Fontes: (asa.aip.org/ani_bioac/ABbioList.html) -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- Behavioural Ecology and Sociobiology, 59 (5) (http://www.springerlink.com/link.asp?id=3D100464) -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- Does song reflect age and viability? A comparison between two=20 populations of the great reed warbler Acrocephalus arundinaceus p. 634 Wolfgang Forstmeier, Dennis Hasselquist, Staffan Bensch, Bernd=20 Leisler Sex, intimidation and severed limbs: the effect of simulated predator=20 attack and limb autotomy on calling and emergence behaviour in the field=20 cricket Gryllus bimaculatus p. 674 Philip W. Bateman, Patricia A. Fleming -------------------------------------------------------------------------= -----=20 Biology Letters 2 (1) 2006 (http://www.journals.royalsoc.ac.uk/(20yxdt45fxp0x055q1iiwo45)/app/home/j= ournal.asp?referrer=3Dparent&backto=3Dhomemainpublications,1,7;) -------------------------------------------------------------------------= -----=20 Antiphonal four-part synchronized chorusing in a Neotropical wren p. 1 Nigel I. Mann, Kimberly A. Dingess, P.J.B. Slater =91Eavesdropping=92 in wild rough-toothed dolphins (Steno bredanensis)? p. 5 Thomas G=F6tz, Ursula Katharina Verfu=DF, Hans-Ulrich Schnitzler Faecal glucocorticoid metabolites and alarm calling in free-living=20 yellow-bellied marmots. p. 29. Daniel T. Blumstein, Marilyn L. Patton,=20 Wendy Saltzman -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- Journal of Mamalogy, 87 (1) -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- Jacobs, David S., Geeta N. Eick, M. Corrie Schoeman, and Conrad A.=20 Matthee. 2006. Cryptic species in an insectivorous bat, Scotophilus=20 dinganii. Journal of Mammalogy 87(1):161-170. ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Proc. of the Royal Society of London: Biological Sciences, 273 (http://www.journals.royalsoc.ac.uk) ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Male monkeys remember which group members have given alarm calls p. 735 Serge A. Wich, Han de Vries -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- The Condor, 108 (1) -------------------------------------------------------------------------= -----=20 Group Living in the Black-Breasted Wood-Quail and the Use of Playbacks as a Survey Technique. Hale, Amanda M. pp. 107-119 Environmental Correlates of Song Structure in Forest Grosbeaks and=20 Saltators. Tubaro, Pablo L.; Lijtmaer, Dario A. pp. 120-129 Apparent Effects of Light Pollution on Singing Behavior of American=20 Robins. Miller, Mark W. pp. 130-139 --=20 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Marcos Gridi-Papp, PhD University of California Department of Physiological Science 621 Charles E. Young Drive S. 90095 Los Angeles, California, USA ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
From: Marcos Gridi-P. <mg...@uc...> - 2006-02-09 05:42:26
|
Publicacoes Recentes Esta lista nao pretende ser completa ou selecionar o melhor. =C9 apenas um esforco de divulgacao para facilitar aos usuarios o acesso a novas pesquisas em bioacustica. Fontes: (asa.aip.org/ani_bioac/ABbioList.html) -------------------------------------------------------------------------= - Animal Behaviour, 71 (http://www.elsevier.com/wps/find/journaldescription.cws_home/622782/desc= ription#description) -------------------------------------------------------------------------= - Who, me? Can baboons infer the target of vocalizations? A.L. Engh, R.R. Hoffmeier, D.L. Cheney, R.M. Seyfarth pp 381-387 The Evolution of Animal Communication. Reliability and Deception in Signalling Systems. By William A. Searcy & Stephen Nowicki. Princeton,=20 New Jersey: Princeton University Press (2005). Pp xiv+270. Price @$26.95 paperback. K.L. Buchanan pp 475 -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- Behavioral Ecology, 17 (2) (http://beheco.oupjournals.org/) -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- Song post exposure, song features, and predation risk A. P. Moller, J. T. Nielsen, and L. Z. Garamszegi Behav. Ecol. 2006 17:=20 155-163. Overlapping signals in banded wrens: long-term effects of prior=20 experience on males and females Michelle L. Hall, Anya Illes, and Sandra=20 L. Vehrencamp Behav. Ecol. 2006 17: 260-269. -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- Acta Acustica United with Acustica, 92 (1)=20 (http://www.eaa-fenestra.org/Products/ActaAcustica/CurrentIssue) -------------------------------------------------------------------------= -----=20 M. Moszynski, A. Stepnowski The Estimation of Fish Length Distribution=20 from its Acoustical Measures p. 147 -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- J. Acoustical Society of America, 119(2) (http://asa.aip.org/jasa.html) -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- Acoustic detection and quantification of benthic egg beds of the squid Loligo opalescens in Monterey Bay, California Kenneth G. Foote, Roger T.=20 Hanlon, Pat J. Iampietro, Rikk G. Kvitek pp. 844--856 Directionality of sperm whale sonar clicks and its relation to piston radiation theory Kristian Beedholm, Bertel Mohl pp. EL14--EL19 Model for vocalization by a bird with distensible vocal cavity and open=20 beak Neville H. Fletcher, Tobias Riede, Roderick A. Suthers pp. 1005--101= 1 Resolution in azimuth sound localization in the Mongolian gerbil=20 (Meriones unguiculatus) Julia K. Maier, Georg M. Klump pp. 1029--1036 Nonoptimal propagation of advertisement calls of midwife toads in=20 Iberian habitats Mario Penna, Rafael Marquez, Jaime Bosch, Eduardo G.=20 Crespo pp. 1227--1237 The spatial context of free-ranging Hawaiian spinner dolphins ([bold Stenella longirostris]) producing acoustic signals Marc O. Lammers,=20 Michiel Schotten, Whitlow W. L. Au pp. 1244--1250 Phase effects in masking by harmonic complexes in birds Amanda M. Lauer,=20 Robert J. Dooling, Marjorie R. Leek, Jennifer J. Lentz pp. 1251--1259 Preliminary evidence for the use of microseismic cues for navigation by=20 the Namib golden mole Edwin R. Lewis, Peter M. Narins, Jennifer U. M.=20 Jarvis, Gary Bronner, Matthew J. Mason pp. 1260--1268 Hearing sensitivity and critical ratios of hooded crows (Corvus corone cornix) Kenneth K. Jensen, Signe Klokker pp. 1269--1276 [patent] Sounding device for showing its location on a fish detector Hwang-Hsing Chen p. 681 [patent] Disposable insect-control member Lantz S. Crawley, J. Roy=20 Nelson p. 696 --=20 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Marcos Gridi-Papp University of California Department of Physiological Science 621 Charles E. Young Drive S. 90095 Los Angeles, California, USA ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
From: Marcos Gridi-P. <mp...@ma...> - 2006-01-30 05:49:10
|
Novo programa de doutorado na Texas A&M. Projetos em bioacustica e sistematica de ambientes marinhos. Dez bolsas disponiveis para quem quiser comecar em agosto de 2006. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- We have a new (2nd year) Ph.D. program in place here at Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi. It is an interdisciplinary program intended to prepare students to study and solve broad systematic problems in the marine and related environment. Bioacoustics will be an element of all the projects with which I am associated. This fall, we will have 10 nine-month assistantships available at the rate of $18,000. I'd like to hear from any students that may be interested in a challenging but different sort of doctoral program. Email me or give me a call at 361-825-3888. We are pretty excited about this. It is a great opportunity to get in on the ground floor of what we hope will become a well-known and respected program. Robert Benson (be...@sc...) Physical and Life Sciences |
From: Marcos Gridi-P. <mp...@ma...> - 2006-01-30 05:42:59
|
We have posted the promotional page of the new sound guide to the frogs of Madagascar at www.fonozoo.com In the page, we include a few cuts of the recordings and some pictures of the recorded species. The sound guide is "in the oven" now and will be available next week. Warm regards from Madrid, Rafael -- Dr. Rafael Marquez Fonoteca Zoologica, Dept. de Biodiversidad y Biologia Evolutiva Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales (CSIC) Jose Gutierrez Abascal 2 28006 Madrid Spain e-mail: rma...@mn... phone +34 91 4111328 ext 1257 fax +34 91 5645078 www.fonozoo.com |
From: Marcos Gridi-P. <mp...@ma...> - 2006-01-30 05:41:42
|
Publicacoes Recentes Esta lista nao pretende ser completa ou selecionar o melhor. =C9 apenas um esforco de divulgacao para facilitar aos usuarios o acesso a novas pesquisas em bioacustica. -------------------------------------------------------------------------= - Animal Behaviour - Volume 70, Issue 5, Nov 05 (http://www.elsevier.com/wps/find/journaldescription.cws_home/622782/desc= ription#description) -------------------------------------------------------------------------= - Group-specific vocal signatures and neighbour=96stranger discrimination i= n=20 the cooperatively breeding green woodhoopoe. 1227-1234. A.N. Radford Peter McGregor, Editor, Animal Communication Networks, Cambridge=20 University Press, Cambridge (2005) Pp. xiv+657. Price =A375.00. BOOK=20 REVIEW. Pages 1236-1237 Luke Rendell Peter Marler and Hans Slabbekoorn, Editors, Nature's Music. The Science=20 of Birdsong, Elsevier, San Diego, California (2004) Pp. viii+513, 2 CDs.=20 Price =A349.95. BOOK REVIEW Pages 1237-1238 Selvino R. de Kort -------------------------------------------------------------------------= - Animal Behaviour - Volume 70, Issue 6, Dec 05 (http://www.elsevier.com/wps/find/journaldescription.cws_home/622782/desc= ription#description) -------------------------------------------------------------------------= - Audience effects on food calls in captive brown capuchin monkeys, /Cebus=20 apella/ Pages 1273-1281 Amy S. Pollick, Harold Gouzoules and Frans B.M.=20 de Waal Seasonal variation in dawn song characteristics in the common=20 nightingale Pages 1265-1271 Hansjoerg P. Kunc, Valentin Amrhein and Marc=20 Naguib The role of unshared songs in singing interactions between neighbouring=20 song sparrows Pages 1297-1304 Michael D. Beecher and S. Elizabeth Campbel= l -------------------------------------------------------------------------= - Animal Behaviour - Volume 71, Issue 1, Jan 06 (http://www.elsevier.com/wps/find/journaldescription.cws_home/622782/desc= ription#description) -------------------------------------------------------------------------= - Stability and group specificity of stereotyped whistles in resident=20 killer whales, Orcinus orca, off British Columbia R. Riesch, J.K.B.=20 Ford, F. Thomsen pp 79-91 Song repertoire size is correlated with body measures and arrival date=20 in common nightingales, Luscinia megarhynchos S. Kipper, R. Mundry, C.=20 Sommer, H. Hultsch, D. Todt pp 211-217 -------------------------------------------------------------------------= - Ethology (http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/journal.asp?ref=3D0179-1613) -------------------------------------------------------------------------= - January 2006, 112, pg. 7 - 21 Toshiaki Tanaka, Hideki Sugiura, Nobuo Masataka=20 Cross-Sectional and Longitudinal Studies of the Development of Group=20 Differences in Acoustic Features of Coo Calls in Two Groups of Japanese=20 Macaques December 2005 Pg. 1103 - 1115 Michael J. Smith, David Hunter Temporal and Geographic=20 Variation in the Advertisement Call of the Booroolong Frog (/Litoria=20 booroolongensis/: Anura: Hylidae) Pg. 1116 =96 1125 F=E1bio S. Nascimento, Michael Hrncir, Adam Tolfiski,=20 Ronaldo Zucchi Scraping Sounds Produced by a Social Wasp (/Asteloeca=20 ujhelyii/, Hymenoptera: Vespidae) October 2005 Pg. 901 - 923 Arla G. Hile, Nancy Tyler Burley, Carol B. Coopersmith,=20 Valerie S. Foster, Georg F. Striedter. Effects of Male Vocal Learning on=20 Female Behavior in the Budgerigar, /Melopsittacus undulatus/ Pg. 951 - 961 Jeremy Hyman Seasonal Variation in Response to Neighbors=20 and Strangers by a Territorial Songbird --=20 |
From: Marcos Gridi-P. <mg...@uc...> - 2006-01-18 22:45:58
|
Publicacoes Recentes Retomando a lista de publicacoes recententes em bioacustica, envio uma listagem de varios artigos que sairam nos ultimos 3 meses. Esta lista nao pretende ser completa ou selecionar o melhor. =C9 apenas um esforco de divulgacao para facilitar aos usuarios o acesso a novas pesquisas em bioacustica. Contribua enviando referencias de artigos sobre bioacustica. Marcos -------------------------------------------------------------------------= - Acoustics Research Letters Online 6 (4) (http://scitation.aip.org/dbt/dbt.jsp?KEY=3DARLOFJ&Volume=3D6&Issue=3D4&t= ype=3DALERT) -------------------------------------------------------------------------= - Big brown bats and June beetles: Multiple pursuit strategies in a=20 seasonal acoustic predator--prey system James A. Simmons pp. 238--242 Reliability of underwater hearing thresholds in pinnipeds Brandon L. Southall, Ronald J. Schusterman, David Kastak, Colleen=20 Reichmuth Kastak pp. 243--249 A method of flight path and chirp pattern reconstruction for multiple=20 flying bats Kyler M. Eastman, James A. Simmons pp. 257--262 -------------------------------------------------------------------------= - Animal Behaviour (http://www.elsevier.com/wps/find/journaldescription.cws_home/622782/desc= ription#description) -------------------------------------------------------------------------= - S.M. Bertram, P.S. Warren. Trade-offs in signalling components differ=20 with signalling effort. Animal Behaviour 70 (3): 477-484 A.S. Griffin, R.S. Savani, K. Hausmanis, L. Lefebvre. Mixed-species=20 aggregations in birds: zenaida doves, Zenaida aurita, respond to the=20 alarm calls of carib grackles, Quiscalus lugubris. Animal Behaviour 70=20 (3):507-515 J. Soltis, K. Leong, A. Savage. African elephant vocal communication I:=20 antiphonal calling behaviour among affiliated females. Animal Behaviour=20 70 (3):579-587 J. Soltis, K. Leong, A. Savage. African elephant vocal communication II:=20 rumble variation reflects the individual identity and emotional state of callers. Animal Behaviour 70=20 (3):589-599 J.R. Madden, R.M. Kilner, N.B. Davies. Nestling responses to adult food=20 and alarm calls: 1. Species-specific responses in two cowbird hosts. Animal Behaviour 70 (3):619-627 J.R. Madden, R.M. Kilner, N.B. Davies. Nestling responses to adult food=20 and alarm calls: 2. Cowbirds and red-winged blackbirds reared by eastern phoebe hosts. Animal Behaviour=20 70 (3): 629-637 M. Penna, H. Pottstock, N. Velasquez. Effect of natural and synthetic=20 noise on evoked vocal responses in a frog of the temperate austral=20 forest. Animal Behaviour 70 (3): 639-651 -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- Behaviour, 142: 6 (http://caliban.ingentaconnect.com/brill/00057959) -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- Donelson, Nathan C. & Moira J.van Staaden (2005) Alternate tactics in=20 male bladder grasshoppers Bullacris membracioides (Orthoptera:=20 Pneumoridae). Behaviour 142: 761-778. -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- Behaviour, 142: 8 (http://caliban.ingentaconnect.com/brill/00057959) -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- Digweed, SM, LM Fedigan & D Rendall (2005) Variable specificity in the anti-predator vocalizations and behaviour of the white-faced capuchin, Ce= bus capucinus. Behaviour 142: 1003-1027. Kunc, HP, V Amrhein & Naguib, Marc (2005) Acoustic features of song categories and their possible implications for communication in the commo= n nightingale (Luscinia megarhynchos). Behaviour 142: 1083-1097. Rios Chelen, AA, CM Garcia & K Riebel (2005) Variation in the song of a sub-oscine, the vermilion flycatcher. Behaviour 142: 1121-1138. -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- Behaviour, 142: 11 (http://caliban.ingentaconnect.com/brill/00057959) -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- Sharp, SP & BJ Hatchwell (2005) Individuality in the contact calls of=20 cooperatively breeding long-tailed tits (Aegithalos caudatus). Behaviour=20 142: 1559-1575. -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- Behaviour, 143: 1 (http://caliban.ingentaconnect.com/brill/00057959) -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- van Dongen, Wouter FD (2006) Variation in singing behaviour reveals=20 possible functions of song in male golden whistlers. Behaviour 143: 57-82. -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- Behavioral Ecology, 17 1 (http://beheco.oupjournals.org/) -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- Duets defend mates in a suboscine passerine, the warbling antbird (Hypocnemis cantator) Nathalie Seddon and Joseph A. Tobias=20 Behav. Ecol. 2006 17: 73-83. -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- Behavioural Ecology and Sociobiology, 59 (2) (http://www.springerlink.com/link.asp?id=3D100464) -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- Bird song and parasites p. 167 L=E1szl=F3 Zsolt Garamszegi -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- The Condor, 107 (3) -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- FEMALE SONG IN EUROPEAN STARLINGS: SEX DIFFERENCES, COMPLEXITY, AND COMPOSITION Pavlova, Denitza; Pinxten, Rianne; Eens, Marcel The Condor Vol. 107, No. 3, pp. 559=96569 CHARACTERISTICS OF THE WING SOUNDS OF FOUR HUMMINGBIRD SPECIES THAT BREED IN CANADA Hunter, Todd A.; Picman, Jaroslav The Condor: Vol. 107, No. 3, pp. 570=96582 -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- Ethology, 111 (8) -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- Kristen A. Pastor, Thomas D. Seeley. pp. 775 - 784The Brief Piping=20 Signal of the Honey Bee: Begging Call or Stop Signal? -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- J. Acoustical Society of America, 118 (3) (http://asa.aip.org/jasa.html) -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- Target phase: An extra dimension for fish and plankton target=20 identification. Richard Barr, Roger F. Coombs. pp. 1358--1371 Probability distributions for locations of calling animals, receivers,=20 sound speeds, winds, and data from travel time differences. John L.=20 Spiesberger. pp. 1790--1800 Underwater hearing sensitivity of a male and a female Steller sea lion (Eumetopias jubatus). Ronald A. Kastelein, Robbert van Schie, Wim C.=20 Verboom, Dick de Haan. pp. 1820--1829 Types, distribution, and seasonal occurrence of sounds attributed to=20 Bryde's whales (Balaenoptera edeni) recorded in the eastern tropical=20 Pacific, 1999--2001. Sara L. Heimlich, David K. Mellinger, Sharon L.=20 Nieukirk, Christopher G. Fox. pp. 1830--1837 [patent] Manatee vocalization detection method and system Christopher A. Sermarini. p. 1261 -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- J. Acoustical Society of America, 118 (5) (http://asa.aip.org/jasa.html) -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- Echolocation in Bat and Dolphins Jeanette A. Thomas, Editor, Cynthia F. Moss, Editor, Marianne Vater,=20 Editor,Patrick W. Moore, Reviewer pp. 2755--2756 Underwater temporary threshold shift in pinnipeds: Effects of noise=20 level and duration David Kastak, Brandon L. Southall, Ronald J.=20 Schusterman, Colleen Reichmuth Kastak pp. 3154--3163 Off-axis effects on the multipulse structure of sperm whale usual clicks with implications for sound production Walter M. X. Zimmer, Peter T.=20 Madsen, Valeria Teloni, Mark P. Johnson, Peter L. Tyack pp. 3337--3345 Source of the North Pacific ``boing'' sound attributed to minke whales Shannon Rankin, Jay Barlow pp. 3346--3351 Target representation of naturalistic echolocation sequences in single=20 unit responses from the inferior colliculus of big brown bats Mark I.=20 Sanderson, James A. Simmons pp. 3352--3361 -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- J. Acoustical Society of America, 118 (6) (http://asa.aip.org/jasa.html) -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- Click production during breathing in a sperm whale (Physeter=20 macrocephalus) Magnus Wahlberg, Alexandros Frantzis, Paraskevi=20 Alexiadou, Peter T. Madsen, Bertel Mohl pp. 3404--3407 Three-dimensional passive acoustic tracking of sperm whales (Physeter macrocephalus) in ray-refracting environments Aaron Thode pp. 3575--3584 Spatial unmasking of birdsong in human listeners: Energetic and informational factors Virginia Best, Erol Ozmeral, Frederick J. Gallun,=20 Kamal Sen, Barbara G. Shinn-Cunningham pp. 3766--3773 Localization of aerial pure tones by pinnipeds Marla M. Holt, Ronald J.=20 Schusterman, David Kastak, Brandon L. Southall pp. 3921--3926 Doppler-shift compensation in the Taiwanese leaf-nosed bat (Hipposideros terasensis) recorded with a telemetry microphone system during flight Shizuko Hiryu, Koji Katsura, Liang-Kong Lin, Hiroshi Riquimaroux,=20 Yoshiaki Watanabe pp. 3927--3933 Origin of the double- and multi-pulse structure of echolocation signals=20 in Yangtze finless porpoise (Neophocaena phocaenoides asiaeorientialis) Songhai Li, Kexiong Wang, Ding Wang, Tomonari Akamatsu pp. 3934--3940 Sei whale sounds recorded in the Antarctic Mark A. McDonald, John A.=20 Hildebrand, Sean M. Wiggins, Deborah Thiele, Deb Glasgow, Sue E. Moore pp. 3941--3945 -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- J. Acoustical Society of America, 119 (1) (http://asa.aip.org/jasa.html) -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- Method and device for detection, identification and densimetric=20 quantification of grain-eating insects in stocks of cereals Pedro=20 Rodriguez Gobernado pp. 24--25 Audition in sciaenid fishes with different swim bladder-inner ear configurations John U. Ramcharitar, Dennis M. Higgs, Arthur N. Popper pp. 439--443 Rainforests as concert halls for birds: Are reverberations improving=20 sound transmission of long song elements? Erwin Nemeth, Torben=20 Dabelsteen, Simon Boel Pedersen, Hans Winkler pp. 620--626 Vocal behavior of resident killer whale matrilines with newborn calves:=20 The role of family signatures Brigitte M. Weiss, Friedrich Ladich, Paul=20 Spong, Helena Symonds pp. 627--635 Monaural and binaural hearing directivity in the bottlenose dolphin: Evoked-potential study Vladimir V. Popov, Alexander Ya. Supin, Vladimir=20 O. Klishin, Tatyana N. Bulgakova pp. 636--644 Automated categorization of bioacoustic signals: Avoiding perceptual pitfalls Volker B. Deecke, Vincent M. Janik pp. 645--653 -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- Journal of Experimental Biology, 208 (17) (http://jeb.biologists.org) -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- Ursula K. Verfuss, Lee A. Miller, and Hans-Ulrich Schnitzler.=20 Spatial orientation in echolocating harbour porpoises (Phocoena=20 phocoena)J Exp Biol 2005;208 3385-3394 Heidi Pye Henninger and Winsor H. Watson, III. Mechanisms=20 underlying the production of carapace vibrations and associated=20 waterborne sounds in the American lobster, Homarus americanus. J Exp=20 Biol 2005;208 3421-3429 -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- Journal of Experimental Biology, 208 (18) (http://jeb.biologists.org) -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- Are hearing sensitivities of freshwater fish adapted to the ambient=20 noise in their habitats? Sonja Amoser and Friedrich Ladich J Exp Biol=20 2005;208 3533-3542 -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- Journal of Experimental Biology, 208 (21) (http://jeb.biologists.org) -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- The contribution of tympanic transmission to fine temporal signal evaluation in an ultrasonic moth. Rafael L. Rodriguez, Johannes Schul,=20 Reginald B. Cocroft, and Michael D. Greenfield. J Exp Biol 2005;208=20 4159-4165 -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- Journal of Experimental Biology, 208 (24) (http://jeb.biologists.org) -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- Male song quality affects circulating but not yolk steroid=20 concentrations in female canaries (Serinus canaria)Rupert C. Marshall,=20 Bernd Leisler, Clive K. Catchpole, and Hubert Schwabl J Exp Biol=20 2005;208 4593-4598 The adaptive function of tiger moth clicks against echolocating bats:=20 an experimental and synthetic approach John M. Ratcliffe and James H.=20 Fullard J Exp Biol 2005;208 4689-4698 The start of phonotactic walking in the fly Ormia ochracea: a=20 kinematic study Andrew C. Mason, Norman Lee, and Michael L. Oshinsky J=20 Exp Biol 2005;208 4699-4708 -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- Marine Mammal Science, 21(4) (http://www.marinemammalogy.org/mms.htm) -------------------------------------------------------------------------= ----- Acoustic ecology of foraging bottlenose dolphons (Tursiops truncatus), habitat-specific use of three sound types. Douglas P. Nowacek, pages 587-602. ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Nature 436 (http://www.nature.com) ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Daniel Bendor and Xiaoqin Wang. The neuronal representation of pitch in=20 primate auditory cortex. Nature 436:1161-1165 ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Proc. of the Royal Society of London: Biological Sciences, 272 (1573) (http://www.journals.royalsoc.ac.uk) ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographical variation in sound production in the anemonefish Amphiprion=20 akallopisos p. 1697 E. Parmentier, J.P. Lagard=E8re, P. Vandewalle, M.L.= =20 Fine ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Outros ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Munger, L., D.K. Mellinger, S.M. Wiggins, S.E. Moore, and J.A.=20 Hildebrand. 2005. Performance of spectrogram correlation in detecting=20 right whale calls in long-term recordings from the Bering Sea. Canadian=20 Acoustics 33(2): 25-34. Hayes, Ashley R., and Nancy J. Huntly. 2005. Effect of wind on the=20 behavior and call transmission of pikas (Ochotona princeps). Journal of=20 Mammalogy 86(5):974-981. Timothy E. Holy, Zhongsheng Guo. Ultrasonic Songs of Male Mice. PLoS=20 Biology Dec 2005, Vol. 3 Issue 12, e-386. Avila-Flores, Rafael, and M. Brock Fenton. 2005. Use of spatial=20 features by foraging insectivorous bats in a large urban landscape.=20 Journal of Mammalogy 86(6):1193-1204. Kastelein, R. A., van der Heul, S., Verboom, W. C, Triesscheijn,=20 R.J.V., and Vaughan Jennings, N. (2006) The influence of underwater data=20 transmission sounds on the displacement of captive harbour seals (Phoca=20 vitulina). Marine Environmental Research, 61, 19-39. Moore, S.E., K.M. Stafford, D.K. Mellinger, and J.A. Hildebrand.=20 2006. Listening for large whales in offshore waters of Alaska.=20 BioScience 56:49-55. |