Additional contributors: Alejandro Vélez; Sandra Tekmen; Mark Bee (faculty mentor)If you have ever had trouble understanding what a person was saying to you in a noisy group setting, then you have experienced a condition known as “the cocktail-party problem.” The cocktail party problem is a condition in which an individual has trouble hearing and understanding an isolated target signal in a noisy group setting. When natural increases and decreases in the levels of background noise occur, a phenomenon known as “modulation masking release” may allow the listener to decipher the target signal during the times when background noise is lowest. Frogs breed in noisy groups known as choruses. Within these choruses, females must isolate the ...
This spreadsheet contains the complete dataset (in long format) from phonotaxis tests in which the a...
High background noise is an impediment to signal detection and perception. We report the use of mult...
148 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2004.Natural auditory scenes, like...
This submission is a supplement to the paper entitled “ Frogs Exploit Statistical Regularities in No...
Faculty advisor: Dr. Mark A. BeeEach breeding season, frogs face the challenge of effectively commun...
Many animal communication systems have evolved signal flexibility depending on environmental conditi...
We studied how certain patterns of acoustic overlap and signal dropout impact the attractiveness to ...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. April 2012. Major: Ecology, Evolution and Behavior. Advi...
Insects often communicate by sound in mixed species choruses; like humans and many vertebrates in cr...
In chorusing species, conspecific acoustic interference exerts strong selection on signal form and t...
Additional contributors: Alejandro Velez; Mark Bee (faculty mentor).For many animals such as frogs a...
Faculty Advisors: Mark Bee, Saumya GuptaIn this project, I investigated the effect of informational ...
Many animals acoustically communicate in large aggregations, producing biotic soundscapes. In turn, ...
1. Anthropogenic noise is widespread, and growing evidence suggests that it can negatively affect an...
Abstract Many animals use multimodal (both visual and acoustic) components in courtship signals. The...
This spreadsheet contains the complete dataset (in long format) from phonotaxis tests in which the a...
High background noise is an impediment to signal detection and perception. We report the use of mult...
148 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2004.Natural auditory scenes, like...
This submission is a supplement to the paper entitled “ Frogs Exploit Statistical Regularities in No...
Faculty advisor: Dr. Mark A. BeeEach breeding season, frogs face the challenge of effectively commun...
Many animal communication systems have evolved signal flexibility depending on environmental conditi...
We studied how certain patterns of acoustic overlap and signal dropout impact the attractiveness to ...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. April 2012. Major: Ecology, Evolution and Behavior. Advi...
Insects often communicate by sound in mixed species choruses; like humans and many vertebrates in cr...
In chorusing species, conspecific acoustic interference exerts strong selection on signal form and t...
Additional contributors: Alejandro Velez; Mark Bee (faculty mentor).For many animals such as frogs a...
Faculty Advisors: Mark Bee, Saumya GuptaIn this project, I investigated the effect of informational ...
Many animals acoustically communicate in large aggregations, producing biotic soundscapes. In turn, ...
1. Anthropogenic noise is widespread, and growing evidence suggests that it can negatively affect an...
Abstract Many animals use multimodal (both visual and acoustic) components in courtship signals. The...
This spreadsheet contains the complete dataset (in long format) from phonotaxis tests in which the a...
High background noise is an impediment to signal detection and perception. We report the use of mult...
148 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2004.Natural auditory scenes, like...