The acoustic world of bat biosonar

Bats and toothed whales (odontocetes) have both independently evolved sophisticated biosonar systems. This raises the question how similar the functional principles of these systems are. Could, for example, insights gained from bats be assumed to hold for odontocetes or vice versa? Could both system...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: R Müller, MJ Roan, Mohammad Khyam, D Alexandre
Format: Other Non-Article Part of Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10018/1337838
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spelling ftcquniportalfig:oai:figshare.com:article/13403777 2023-05-15T18:33:31+02:00 The acoustic world of bat biosonar R Müller MJ Roan Mohammad Khyam D Alexandre 2018-10-18T00:00:00Z http://hdl.handle.net/10018/1337838 unknown https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/The_acoustic_world_of_bat_biosonar/13403777 http://hdl.handle.net/10018/1337838 CQUniversity General 1.0 Acoustics and Acoustical Devices Waves Biosonar systems Sonar sensing Bats Odontocetes Text Journal contribution 2018 ftcquniportalfig 2022-08-05T12:04:43Z Bats and toothed whales (odontocetes) have both independently evolved sophisticated biosonar systems. This raises the question how similar the functional principles of these systems are. Could, for example, insights gained from bats be assumed to hold for odontocetes or vice versa? Could both systems be lumped together as a single source of inspiration for novel engineering approaches to sonar sensing? Similarities and differences between the biosonar systems of bats and odontocetes are likely to depend on the respective acoustic environments in which these systems have evolved as well as on the evolutionary starting points and capabilities for adaptations of these two very different phylogenetic groups. In this presentation, the focus will be on comparing the acoustic environments of bats and odontocetes. The acoustics of biosonar sensing can be organized into three different aspects: (i) the properties of the propagation medium, (ii) the geometry and material of the boundaries that limit the propagation channel (this includes targets of interest and clutter), and (iii) the time-frequency and spatial properties of the sources. In this presentation, these aspects will be reviewed for the in-air biosonar of bats. In the companion talk, the same will be done for the underwater biosonar of the odontocetes. Other Non-Article Part of Journal/Newspaper toothed whales CQUniversity: acquire
institution Open Polar
collection CQUniversity: acquire
op_collection_id ftcquniportalfig
language unknown
topic Acoustics and Acoustical Devices
Waves
Biosonar systems
Sonar sensing
Bats
Odontocetes
spellingShingle Acoustics and Acoustical Devices
Waves
Biosonar systems
Sonar sensing
Bats
Odontocetes
R Müller
MJ Roan
Mohammad Khyam
D Alexandre
The acoustic world of bat biosonar
topic_facet Acoustics and Acoustical Devices
Waves
Biosonar systems
Sonar sensing
Bats
Odontocetes
description Bats and toothed whales (odontocetes) have both independently evolved sophisticated biosonar systems. This raises the question how similar the functional principles of these systems are. Could, for example, insights gained from bats be assumed to hold for odontocetes or vice versa? Could both systems be lumped together as a single source of inspiration for novel engineering approaches to sonar sensing? Similarities and differences between the biosonar systems of bats and odontocetes are likely to depend on the respective acoustic environments in which these systems have evolved as well as on the evolutionary starting points and capabilities for adaptations of these two very different phylogenetic groups. In this presentation, the focus will be on comparing the acoustic environments of bats and odontocetes. The acoustics of biosonar sensing can be organized into three different aspects: (i) the properties of the propagation medium, (ii) the geometry and material of the boundaries that limit the propagation channel (this includes targets of interest and clutter), and (iii) the time-frequency and spatial properties of the sources. In this presentation, these aspects will be reviewed for the in-air biosonar of bats. In the companion talk, the same will be done for the underwater biosonar of the odontocetes.
format Other Non-Article Part of Journal/Newspaper
author R Müller
MJ Roan
Mohammad Khyam
D Alexandre
author_facet R Müller
MJ Roan
Mohammad Khyam
D Alexandre
author_sort R Müller
title The acoustic world of bat biosonar
title_short The acoustic world of bat biosonar
title_full The acoustic world of bat biosonar
title_fullStr The acoustic world of bat biosonar
title_full_unstemmed The acoustic world of bat biosonar
title_sort acoustic world of bat biosonar
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/10018/1337838
genre toothed whales
genre_facet toothed whales
op_relation https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/The_acoustic_world_of_bat_biosonar/13403777
http://hdl.handle.net/10018/1337838
op_rights CQUniversity General 1.0
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