Computers Seek The Call Of An Extinct Bird 28
Buran writes: "As a self-proclaimed geek and a relative (and fascinated!) newcomer to the world of birding, I found this article in the New York Times Science Tuesday about the search for the ivory-billed woodpecker to be rather interesting. The bird, which was listed as extinct in 1997, has not been definitively sighted since the 1950s, but a recent reported sighting (in 1999) has led to a redoubled effort to find it. The geek side is this: Since it would be impractical for a human to sift through 5,000 hours of recorded sound (two and a half years, they estmate) to listen for the bird's distinctive call, the Cornell researchers are working on algorithms that can pick out interesting sections of digitally recorded sound, taken from microphones placed throughout the study area, for a human (who can outdo a computer any day at making the final determination) to review. I am hopeful that the search will return a positive result."
Humans better? (Score:2)
Re:Humans better? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Humans better? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Humans better? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Humans better? (Score:1)
I know that there are a lot of "intelligent" matching algorithms now being developed and deployed that can see patterns even with distortion. I have heard rumors of some facial recognition software that was being considered for deployal at O'Hare International Airport last year (I don't know if it actually was or not), but the technology seemed to be proficient at picking up criminals/suspects even if they did some altering of their facial features, such as grow a beard, wear thick glasses, or get a tan.
My point is that certainly the human brain is better at picking up the "fuzzy stuff", but computers are getting better and better at it.
Re:Humans better? (Score:1)
Re:Humans better? (Score:1)
Hrm indeed. (Score:4, Funny)
Solution... (Score:1)
This is a trivial problem: you pay the listener by the hour.
RealTime plus Camera? (Score:2, Interesting)
I wonder if it can be done RealTime, (how good are the current gen DSPs) and the
direction triangulated with 3 or more mics to point a camera in the right direction?
Re:RealTime plus Camera? (Score:3, Funny)
Seems so simple (Score:1)
Re:Seems so simple (Score:1)
Of course, keep in mind that Nature has been building brains for millions of years; we've only been doing it for about fifty.
But what shall we name it? (Score:1)
These are great projects (Score:2)
I would love to sit in on this project and try to figure out what the various sounds are...
Ivory billed.......ught oh...... (Score:2)
Ooooppppssss.....
I think I hit one last year, thought it was just a mutant, seriously. Ive seen woodpeckers around the house in droves since I was a kid, there a lot of older poles riddled with bugs they like to chomp, It can get at times annoying, no worse than catching a humminbird in the eye, had that happen too.
But whizzing down my moms road last year, smack right in the windshield, I pulled in my moms and walked back, it was dead and I wanted to make sure it wasnt suffering. My uncle, next door commented it was indeed different than we had ever seen, the usuall red and grey jobbers.
Chock one more extinct speices up to GM.....
NPR story has original recording (Score:3, Informative)
Could the human parallel process the audio? (Score:1)