Faculty advisor: Dr. Mark A. BeeEach breeding season, frogs face the challenge of effectively communicating in noisy social environments, known as the cocktail party problem. In acoustically dense breeding choruses, different species produce advertisement calls that potentially overlap in time or frequency, interfering with the females’ perception of the calls. Natural fluctuations in the amplitude of the interfering noise may allow females to catch acoustic glimpses of the males’ calls. Females can take advantage of these dips to assess call characteristics like frequency, or separation of calls or pulses. By listening in the dips, females achieve a release from the masking and can detect and distinguish the call of an appropriate mate. Wh...
Many animals acoustically communicate in large aggregations, producing biotic soundscapes. In turn, ...
Most male frogs produce calls to attract females and repel rivals. The transmission of these calls c...
This submission is a supplement to the paper entitled “ Frogs Exploit Statistical Regularities in No...
The emergence and maintenance of animal communication systems requires the co-evolution of signal an...
Additional contributors: Alejandro Vélez; Sandra Tekmen; Mark Bee (faculty mentor)If you have ever h...
Acoustic communication is both widespread and often essential for successful mate selection, territo...
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 ...
Faculty Advisors: Mark Bee, Saumya GuptaIn this project, I investigated the effect of informational ...
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...
148 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2004.Natural auditory scenes, like...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. April 2012. Major: Ecology, Evolution and Behavior. Advi...
Frogs rely on acoustic communication for mating but they tend to hear within a narrow frequency rang...
Túngara frogs rely primarily on acoustic advertisement calls to find a mate. These calls consist of ...
Many animals acoustically communicate in large aggregations, producing biotic soundscapes. In turn, ...
Most male frogs produce calls to attract females and repel rivals. The transmission of these calls c...
This submission is a supplement to the paper entitled “ Frogs Exploit Statistical Regularities in No...
The emergence and maintenance of animal communication systems requires the co-evolution of signal an...
Additional contributors: Alejandro Vélez; Sandra Tekmen; Mark Bee (faculty mentor)If you have ever h...
Acoustic communication is both widespread and often essential for successful mate selection, territo...
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 ...
Faculty Advisors: Mark Bee, Saumya GuptaIn this project, I investigated the effect of informational ...
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...
148 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2004.Natural auditory scenes, like...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. April 2012. Major: Ecology, Evolution and Behavior. Advi...
Frogs rely on acoustic communication for mating but they tend to hear within a narrow frequency rang...
Túngara frogs rely primarily on acoustic advertisement calls to find a mate. These calls consist of ...
Many animals acoustically communicate in large aggregations, producing biotic soundscapes. In turn, ...
Most male frogs produce calls to attract females and repel rivals. The transmission of these calls c...
This submission is a supplement to the paper entitled “ Frogs Exploit Statistical Regularities in No...