Andy et al,

Magnus raises the same question I had regarding your message. Why would 
algorithm-detected NFC data be considered "incidental" rather than a 
"stationary count"?  Seems effort and methodology would be very explicitly 
quantified.  I assume this has to do with how "stationary count" data are 
currently analyzed by eBird, but not sure the details...  Nevertheless, a 
nighttime point count is still, well, a point count.  Is there a concern that 
the algorithms are not reliable enough to detect all species / individuals?  It 
would be helpful to know a bit more about the reasoning for those of us who are 
considering submitting NFC data to eBird.

Thanks!
Matt


Matt Sarver
Greenville, DE



________________________________
 From: Magnus Robb <[email protected]>
To: Andrew Farnsworth <[email protected]> 
Cc: [email protected] 
Sent: Thursday, February 21, 2013 10:09 AM
Subject: Re: [nfc-l] Ebird and NFC protocol
 

Hi Andrew and others,

I started using eBird exactly because it had a facility for entering NFC data, 
and it seemed a suitable place for me to keep my records. I noted that 
automated remote listening data was not supposed to be entered, but since none 
of my identifications are automated, I did not feel excluded. I had not fully 
understood that real-time was the key or that listing concerns (which are no 
concern of mine) were the reason for not making the NFC protocol more 
inclusive. My assumption was that as quite possibly the only ebirder regularly 
entering NFCs from Europe, something that didn't quite fit the rules was better 
than nothing! Now I am contemplating following your suggestion about creating a 
listening station identity, entering things as 'incidental', etc but I worry 
that I will misrepresent myself as they were planned observations for which 
effort data is available.

Your email seems to put NFC people in two camps: those who collect all their 
data by ear and those who let software do the identification. I belong to 
neither, as I usually record while I sleep then identify the sounds by ear and 
eye the next day. Do I really have to edit two autumns worth of regular ebird 
NFC entries?

While I am on the subject of NFCs on eBird. Is there some way that I can find 
all the NFC checklists around the world for a particular date? My own seem to 
disappear into a black hole and are not easily visible in the system, except to 
me. That may be one advantage of making them 'incidental' instead of NFC counts.

all the best,

Magnus Robb



On 21 Feb 2013, at 14:27:12, Andrew Farnsworth wrote:

Hi all,
>I'd like to chime in on this timely post as well. Thank you, Laurent, for the 
>initial question, and thank you, Rob, for continuing the discussion. By way of 
>introduction, for those that do not know or that recently joined the list, I 
>work for the Lab of Ornithology as the BirdCast project leader and work 
>closely with the eBird team. I helped to draft the NFC Protocol. 
>
>
>eBird definitely welcomes all of the acoustic data that we can provide. The 
>protocol is clear on the real-time listening methods, for those that do and do 
>not use amplification 
>(http://ebird.org/content/ebird/about/nfc-count-protocol). Yes, you can enter 
>calls you hear by the NFC Protocol if you hear them in real-time, whether by 
>your ear or via a speaker-microphone-recording station. If you happen to be 
>recording, spectrograms and audio files make ideal documentation to embed or 
>link in the checklist. Here's a nice diurnal example: 
>http://ebird.org/ebird/view/checklist?subID=S12046094.
> 
>As Rob suggests, correctly, one can also enter other flight call data as well, 
>such as data recorded by an automated recording station. However, if you do 
>this, please be clear that you should do all of the following:
>- Create a separate, non-personal account (n.b. the recorded/non real time 
>data violate listing rules in that you cannot count what you didn't witness).
>- Enter these data as incidental sightings.
>- Include as detailed a description as you can in the comments about how the 
>recorded data were collected (e.g. specifics on recording gear, sound analysis 
>package used, algorithm used, etc.)
>
>
>A few additional comments:
>For eBird, having some rules for listing is an important incentive, since 
>eBird does have some competitive outputs. We hope to have a better way to 
>address these in the future (e.g. a way to "not count" certain submissions, if 
>you choose), but for now, it is important to respect these so flight call 
>counters are not seen as "cheating." Treating your flight call recording 
>station as a separate observer is, in some ways, appropriate. Obviously, for 
>scientific use, we want to know that you recorded the bird at that site, so 
>submission is OK. However, we do hope to develop a way to add "remote 
>listening" protocol in the future, which is part of the reason that the 
>current protocol discourages submission of remote listening data. So, if you 
>record an important yard bird, or local record, by non-real-time methods, 
>enter it accordingly.
>
>
>The eBird team is planning to post some additional information on this topic 
>on the eBird site later this year. I will make sure to cross-post that 
>information here as soon as the story goes live.
>
>
>Good (nocturnal) birding!
>Andrew
>
>
>----------
>BirdCast Project Leader
>Information Science, Cornell Lab of Ornithology
>[email protected]
>--
>NFC-L List Info:
>Welcome and Basics
>Rules and Information
>Subscribe, Configuration and Leave
>Archives:
>The Mail Archive
>Surfbirds
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>Please submit your observations to eBird!
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