Authors
Nirosha Priyadarshani, Stephen Marsland, Isabel Castro
Publication date
2018/5
Source
Journal of Avian Biology
Volume
49
Issue
5
Pages
jav-01447
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Description
Conservationists are increasingly using autonomous acoustic recorders to determine the presence/absence and the abundance of bird species. Unlike humans, these recorders can be left in the field for extensive periods of time in any habitat. Although data acquisition is automated, manual processing of recordings is labour intensive, tedious, and prone to bias due to observer variations. Hence automated birdsong recognition is an efficient alternative.
However, only few ecologists and conservationists utilise the existing birdsong recognisers to process unattended field recordings because the software calibration time is exceptionally high and requires considerable knowledge in signal processing and underlying systems, making the tools less user‐friendly. Even allowing for these difficulties, getting accurate results is exceedingly hard. In this review we examine the state‐of‐the‐art, summarising and discussing …
Total citations
20182019202020212022202320246254150585921
Scholar articles