Dear All,

We are pleased to announce the publication of the following paper:

“Automatic acoustic estimation of sperm whale size distributions achieved 
through machine recognition of on-axis clicks”

By: Wilfried A. M. Beslin, Hal Whitehead, and Shane Gero

Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 144: 3485-3495

DOI: 10.1121/1.5082291

ABSTRACT:
The waveforms of individual sperm whale clicks often appear as multiple pulses, 
which are the product of a single pulse reverberating throughout the spermaceti 
organ. Since there is a relationship between spermaceti organ size and total 
body size, it is possible to estimate a whale’s length by measuring the 
inter-pulse intervals (IPIs) within its clicks. However, if a click is recorded 
off-axis, the IPI corresponding to spermaceti organ length is usually obscured. 
This paper presents an algorithm for automatically estimating the “true” IPIs 
of sperm whales in a recording by measuring them from on-axis clicks only. The 
routine works by classifying detected clicks with a support vector machine, 
assessing the stability of their IPIs, and then clustering the stable IPIs 
using Gaussian mixture models. Results show that the routine is very accurate 
in obtaining reliable IPIs, but has a
high false negative rate. Nonetheless, since sperm whales click very 
frequently, it is possible to obtain useful IPI distributions with only a few 
minutes of recording. This algorithm makes it possible to estimate the body 
lengths of multiple sperm whales automatically with only one hydrophone. An 
implementation is available for download at 
http://whitelab.biology.dal.ca/CABLE/cable.htm.

The PDF can be obtained at https://asa.scitation.org/doi/10.1121/1.5082291 or 
by request.


Regards,

Wilfried Beslin
Whitehead Lab
Dalhousie University

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