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1 February 2000 SOUND DESIGN FOR VOCALIZATIONS: QUALITY IN THE WOODS, CONSISTENCY IN THE FIELDS
Timothy J. Brown, Paul Handford
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Abstract

The acoustic adaptation hypothesis (AAH) predicts that vocalizations intended for unambiguous long range communication should possess amplitude modulation (AM) characteristics such that the temporal patterning of amplitude degrades less than alternative patterns during transmission through native habitat. The specific predictions are that open habitat signals should be structured as rapid AM trills, whereas closed habitat signals should be structured as low-rate AM tonal whistles. To investigate the benefit of trill- and whistle-structured signals in open and closed habitats, respectively, a high and low carrier frequency set of four synthetic signals which ranged from rapid AM trills to low rate AM whistles were transmitted 3 hours after sunrise through five different habitat types ranging from closed mature forest to open grassland. Results indicate that, on average, whistles degrade less than trills in both habitats. Trills benefit in open habitats through their tendency to be received with a more consistent quality than whistles. Such differences in transmission consistency among AM patterns are not found in closed habitats. While not degrading less on average, lower frequency signals are received with a more consistent quality than are higher frequency signals of the same AM structure, in both open and closed habitats.

Timothy J. Brown and Paul Handford "SOUND DESIGN FOR VOCALIZATIONS: QUALITY IN THE WOODS, CONSISTENCY IN THE FIELDS," The Condor 102(1), 81-92, (1 February 2000). https://doi.org/10.1650/0010-5422(2000)102[0081:SDFVQI]2.0.CO;2
Received: 2 February 1999; Accepted: 1 October 1999; Published: 1 February 2000
KEYWORDS
acoustic adaptation hypothesis
amplitude modulation
degradation
ranging
reverberation
transmission consistency
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