Dear all,

We are pleased to announce the publication of the article "On the reliability 
of acoustic annotations and automatic detections of Antarctic blue whale calls 
under different acoustic conditions" in JASA, available at: 
https://doi.org/10.1121/1.5049803

Abstract:
Evaluation of the performance of computer-based algorithms to automatically 
detect mammalian vocalizations often relies on comparisons between detector 
outputs and a reference data set, generally obtained by manual annotation of 
acoustic recordings. To explore the reproducibility of these annotations, 
inter- and intra-analyst variability in manually annotated Antarctic blue whale 
(ABW) Z-calls are investigated by two analysts in acoustic data from two ocean 
basins representing different scenarios in terms of call abundance and 
background noise. Manual annotations exhibit strong inter- and intra analyst 
variability, with less than 50% agreement between analysts. This variability is 
mainly caused by the difficulty of reliably and reproducibly distinguishing 
single calls in an ABW chorus made of overlaying distant calls. Furthermore, 
the performance of two automated detectors, based on spectrogram correlation or 
subspace-detection strategy, is evaluated by comparing detector output to a 
“conservative” manually annotated reference data set, which comprises only 
analysts’ matching events. This study highlights the need for a standardized 
approach for human annotations and automatic detections, including a 
quantitative description of their performance, to improve the comparability of 
acoustic data, which is particularly relevant in the context of collaborative 
approaches in collecting and analyzing large passive acoustic data sets.

Kind regards,


Emmanuelle LEROY -- Research Fellow
MammalLab -- School of Biological, Earth & Environmental Sciences
University of New South Wales -- 2052 -- Australia
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>

Reply via email to