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SAIEE Africa Research Journal

On-line version ISSN 1991-1696
Print version ISSN 0038-2221

Abstract

BABALOLA, Oluwaseyi P.; USMAN, Ayinde M.; OGUNDILE, Olayinka O.  and  VERSFELD, Daniel J. J.. Detection of Bryde's Whale Short Pulse Calls using Time Domain Features with Hidden Markov Models. SAIEE ARJ [online]. 2021, vol.112, n.1, pp.15-23. ISSN 1991-1696.

Passive acoustic monitoring (PAM) is generally used to extract acoustic signals produced by cetaceans. However, the large data volume from the PAM process is better analyzed using an automated technique such as the hidden Markov models (HMM). In this paper, the HMM is used as a detection and classification technique due to its robustness and low time complexity. Nonetheless, certain parameters, such as the choice of features to be extracted from the signal, the frame duration, and the number of states affect the performance of the model. The results show that HMM exhibits best performances as the number of states increases with short frame duration. However, increasing the number of states creates more computational complexity in the model. The inshore Bryde's whales produce short pulse calls with distinct signal features, which are observable in the time-domain. Hence, a time-domain feature vector is utilized to reduce the complexity of the HMM. Simulation results also show that average power as a time-domain feature vector provides the best performance compared to other feature vectors for detecting the short pulse call of inshore Bryde's whales based on the HMM technique. More so, the extracted features such as the average power, mean, and zero-crossing rate, are combined to form a single 3-dimensional vector (PaMZ). The PaMZ-HMM shows improved performance and reduced complexity over existing feature extraction techniques such as Mel-scale frequency cepstral coefficients (MFCC) and linear predictive coding (LPC). Thus, making the PaMZ-HMM suitable for real-time detection.

Keywords : Acoustic signal; Bryde's whales; hidden Markov models; passive acoustic monitoring; time-domain features.

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