Dominika presented talk at Cornell Lab of Ornithology
18/09/24 16:38
Today Dominka Winiarska had lecture at Cornell. Invitation from Ben Goittesman below. Her talk was recorder so you may see it later.
Hi everyone,
Our next BioacousTalks is tomorrow, September 18th, from 11 AM – 12 PM ET with Dominika Winiarska, who will present her work on measuring acoustic detection ranges and implications for study design and analysis.
Zoom Link: https://cornell.zoom.us/j/94632241116?pwd=86tC0YbenW1ce0ufIeohgpenEobbdd.1 (passcode is 451311)
Here is the rundown of Dominika's presentation:
This talk addresses the technical aspects of passive acoustic monitoring (PAM), focusing on general bird detectability in forests and how researchers can adjust their study design accordingly. It also highlights how different data processing methods—listening to recordings, visual analysis of spectrograms, and automated analysis using BirdNET—can affect detection distances and thus research results.
About Dominika:
“My research focuses on various aspects of passive acoustic monitoring, including assessing its effectiveness regarding detection distances and detection methods. I also work on comparing traditional monitoring methods with acoustic approaches to capture comprehensive data on bird communities. Currently, I am awaiting the defense of my doctoral thesis.”
Another cool bioacoustics series this week:
WildLabs is hosting a Virtual Meetup on Bioacoustics Data Analysis and AI this week, featuring Justin Kitzes, Stefan Kahl, Kate Jones, and Sarab Sethi. It will be from 2-3.30 pm UTC. Click here to register.
All the best,
Ben
Hi everyone,
Our next BioacousTalks is tomorrow, September 18th, from 11 AM – 12 PM ET with Dominika Winiarska, who will present her work on measuring acoustic detection ranges and implications for study design and analysis.
Zoom Link: https://cornell.zoom.us/j/94632241116?pwd=86tC0YbenW1ce0ufIeohgpenEobbdd.1 (passcode is 451311)
Here is the rundown of Dominika's presentation:
This talk addresses the technical aspects of passive acoustic monitoring (PAM), focusing on general bird detectability in forests and how researchers can adjust their study design accordingly. It also highlights how different data processing methods—listening to recordings, visual analysis of spectrograms, and automated analysis using BirdNET—can affect detection distances and thus research results.
About Dominika:
“My research focuses on various aspects of passive acoustic monitoring, including assessing its effectiveness regarding detection distances and detection methods. I also work on comparing traditional monitoring methods with acoustic approaches to capture comprehensive data on bird communities. Currently, I am awaiting the defense of my doctoral thesis.”
Another cool bioacoustics series this week:
WildLabs is hosting a Virtual Meetup on Bioacoustics Data Analysis and AI this week, featuring Justin Kitzes, Stefan Kahl, Kate Jones, and Sarab Sethi. It will be from 2-3.30 pm UTC. Click here to register.
All the best,
Ben