Of the roughly 250,000 known marine species, scientists think all ~126 marine mammals emit sounds – the ‘thwop’, ‘muah’, and ‘boop’s of a humpback whale, for example, or the boing of a minke whale.
Researchers from FishEye Collaborative, a conservation-technology nonprofit, Cornell University, and Aalto University have developed a new tool that combines underwater sound recording and 360° video ...
Chris Kehrer, science program manager at Port Royal Sound Foundation in South Carolina, recently answered a question I have wondered about since childhood. Why does the Atlantic croaker, a marine fish ...
A metamaterial is a composite material that exhibits unique properties due to its structure, and now researchers have used one featuring a small sawtooth pattern on its surface to move and position ...
Researchers at the University of New Hampshire are partnering with the first utility-scale offshore wind project approved in the U.S., Vineyard Wind, to gather data on underwater sounds and how they ...
TOKYO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--OKI (TOKYO: 6703) has developed ‘ship classification AI system technology’ for the automatic classification of ship types through deep learning of underwater sounds. This ...
Back in 1982, a team of New Zealand scientists was out in the waters of the Southern Ocean when they picked up a series of odd sounds. Just four short bursts, strangely reminiscent of underwater duck ...
New tool combines 360° video with spatial audio recording to accurately identify fish through sound. Recordings are the most extensive bank of natural fish sounds published to date, including many ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results