Low-amplitude noise elicits the Lombard effect in plainfin midshipman mating vocalizations in the wild

2021 ◽  
Vol 181 ◽  
pp. 29-39
Author(s):  
Nicholas A.W. Brown ◽  
William D. Halliday ◽  
Sigal Balshine ◽  
Francis Juanes
Author(s):  
Sidi M. Berri ◽  
J. M. Klosner

Abstract This paper investigates a new strategy for early detection of defects in a power transmission pair of spur gears. Sensitivity to local defects is enhanced by processing the signal as follows. The orthogonal discrete wavelet transform (ODWT) of the band-pass filtered averaged signal is first obtained. This is followed by thresholding in the wavelet domain, thereby removing the low amplitude noise contribution. The inverse wavelet transform then essentially reconstructs the component of the signal that is due to the defect. Experimental results demonstrate the efficiency of this procedure.


2010 ◽  
Vol 28 (1) ◽  
pp. 61-68 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. BRADY TREXLER ◽  
ALEXANDER R.R. CASTI ◽  
YU ZHANG

AbstractIn the retina, rod bipolar (RBP) cells synapse with many rods, and suppression of rod outer segment and synaptic noise is necessary for their detection of rod single-photon responses (SPRs). Depending on the rods’ signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), the suppression mechanism will likely eliminate some SPRs as well, resulting in decreased quantum efficiency. We examined this synapse in rabbit, where 100 rods converge onto each RBP. Suction electrode recordings showed that rabbit rod SPRs were difficult to distinguish from noise (independent SNR estimates were 2.3 and 2.8). Nonlinear transmission from rods to RBPs improved response detection (SNR = 8.7), but a large portion of the rod SPRs was discarded. For the dimmest flashes, the loss approached 90%. Despite the high rejection ratio, noise of two distinct types was apparent in the RBP traces: low-amplitude rumblings and discrete events that resembled the SPR. The SPR-like event frequency suggests that they result from thermal isomerizations of rhodopsin, which occurred at the rate 0.033/s/rod. The presence of low-amplitude noise is explained by a sigmoidal input–output relationship at the rod—RBP synapse and the input of noisy rods. The rabbit rod SNR and RBP quantum efficiency are the lowest yet reported, suggesting that the quantum efficiency of the rod—RBP synapse may depend on the SNR in rods. These results point to the possibility that fewer photoisomerizations are discarded for species such as primate, which has a higher rod SNR.


2014 ◽  
Vol 41 (8) ◽  
pp. 0802004
Author(s):  
闫露露 Yan Lulu ◽  
张颜艳 Zhang Yanyan ◽  
赵文宇 Zhao Wenyu ◽  
孟森 Meng Sen ◽  
郑恩让 Zheng Enrang ◽  
...  

2000 ◽  
Vol 39 (31) ◽  
pp. 5732 ◽  
Author(s):  
Livia Conti ◽  
Maurizio De Rosa ◽  
Francesco Marin

1975 ◽  
Vol 84 (1) ◽  
pp. 117-124 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yasuo Koike ◽  
John Markel

Inverse filtering analysis was performed on acoustic speech samples of the vowel sound “ah” produced by ten selected patients and ten normal adults. The inverse filter output signal is the residue obtained by automatically extracting the effects of the supraglottal structure from the acoustic speech signal. For normal speakers, the residue consists of a series of rather sharp periodic spikes having low amplitude noise between periods. For pathological voices, the residue consists of lower amplitude, less sharp spikes having higher amplitude noise between periods. Comparisons between the acoustic speech waveforms and the residue signals illustrate the superiority of the residue signal for detecting irregularity, and thus suggest the feasibility of applying inverse filtering as an aid to laryngeal diagnostics.


2012 ◽  
Vol 44 (5) ◽  
pp. 1333-1337
Author(s):  
Huifang Ma ◽  
Xia Zhang ◽  
Qi Jing ◽  
Yongqing Huang ◽  
Xiaomin Ren

1994 ◽  
Vol 65 (12) ◽  
pp. 3628-3633 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Hilico ◽  
D. Touahri ◽  
F. Nez ◽  
A. Clairon

2013 ◽  
Vol 50 (3) ◽  
pp. 654-670 ◽  
Author(s):  
James Hook

The critical paths of a max-plus linear system with noise are random variables. In this paper we introduce the edge criticalities which measure how often the critical paths traverse each edge in the precedence graph. We also present the parallel path approximation, a novel method for approximating these new statistics as well as the previously studied max-plus exponent. We show that, for low amplitude noise, the critical paths spend most of their time traversing the deterministic maximally weighted cycle and that, as the noise amplitude is increased, the critical paths become more random and their distribution over the edges in the precedence graph approaches a highly uniform measure of maximal entropy.


2013 ◽  
Vol 50 (03) ◽  
pp. 654-670
Author(s):  
James Hook

The critical paths of a max-plus linear system with noise are random variables. In this paper we introduce theedge criticalitieswhich measure how often the critical paths traverse each edge in the precedence graph. We also present theparallel path approximation, a novel method for approximating these new statistics as well as the previously studied max-plus exponent. We show that, for low amplitude noise, the critical paths spend most of their time traversing the deterministic maximally weighted cycle and that, as the noise amplitude is increased, the critical paths become more random and their distribution over the edges in the precedence graph approaches a highly uniform measure of maximal entropy.


Author(s):  
Thecan Caesar-Ton That ◽  
Lynn Epstein

Nectria haematococca mating population I (anamorph, Fusarium solani) macroconidia attach to its host (squash) and non-host surfaces prior to germ tube emergence. The macroconidia become adhesive after a brief period of protein synthesis. Recently, Hickman et al. (1989) isolated N. haematococca adhesion-reduced mutants. Using freeze substitution, we compared the development of the macroconidial wall in the wild type in comparison to one of the mutants, LEI.Macroconidia were harvested at 1C, washed by centrifugation, resuspended in a dilute zucchini fruit extract and incubated from 0 - 5 h. During the incubation period, wild type macroconidia attached to uncoated dialysis tubing. Mutant macroconidia did not attach and were collected on poly-L-lysine coated dialysis tubing just prior to freezing. Conidia on the tubing were frozen in liquid propane at 191 - 193C, substituted in acetone with 2% OsO4 and 0.05% uranyl acetate, washed with acetone, and flat-embedded in Epon-Araldite. Using phase contrast microscopy at 1000X, cells without freeze damage were selected, remounted, sectioned and post-stained sequentially with 1% Ba(MnO4)2 2% uranyl acetate and Reynold’s lead citrate. At least 30 cells/treatment were examined.


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