Whale call detection with deep neural networks
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North-West University (South Africa).
Abstract
Passive acoustic monitoring with hydrophones makes it possible to detect the presence of
marine animals over large areas. For monitoring to be cost-effective, this process should
be fully automated. We explore a new approach to detecting whale calls, using an endto-
end neural architecture and traditional speech features. We compare the results of
the new approach with a Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) applied to spectrograms,
currently the standard approach to whale call detection. Experiments are conducted using
the “Acoustic trends for the blue and fin whale library” from the Australian Antarctic
Data Centre (AADC).
We experiment with different types of speech features (Mel Frequency Cepstral Coefficients
(MFCC) and Filter banks (Fbanks)) and different ways of framing the task. We
demonstrate that a time-delay neural network is a viable solution for whale call detection,
with the additional benefit that spectrogram tuning – required to obtain high-quality
spectrograms in challenging acoustic conditions – is no longer necessary.
Description
Master of Engineering in Computer and Electronic Engineering, North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus