Multiecho Processing by an Echolocating Dolphin

Abstract

Bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) use short, wideband pulses for echolocation. Individual waveforms have high-range resolution capability but are relatively insensitive to range rate. Signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) is not greatly improved by pulse compression because each waveform has small time-bandwidth product. The dolphin, however, often uses many pulses to interrogate a target, and could use multipulse processing to combine the resulting echoes. Multipulse processing could mitigate the small SNR improvement from pulse compression, and could greatly improve range-rate estimation, moving target indication, range tracking, and acoustic imaging. All these hypothetical capabilities depend upon the animal's ability to combine multiple echoes for detection and/or estimation. An experiment to test multiecho processing in a dolphin measured detection of a stationary target when the number N of available target echoes was increased, using synthetic echoes. The SNR required for detection decreased as the number of available echoes increased, as expected for multiecho processing. A receiver that sums binary-quantized data samples from multiple echoes closely models the N dependence of the SNR required by the dolphin. Such a receiver has distribution-tolerant (nonparametric) properties that make it robust in environments with nonstationary and/or non-Gaussian noise, such as the pulses created by snapping shrimp.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Aug 01, 2003
Accession Number
ADA461581

Entities

People

  • David A. Helweg
  • Lois A. Dankiewicz
  • Patrick W. Moore
  • Richard A. Altes

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Advanced Electronics
  • Energy and Power Technologies

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Acoustic Detection
  • Bandwidth
  • Biosonar
  • Detection
  • Detectors
  • Environment
  • False Alarms
  • Gaussian Noise
  • Moving Targets
  • Noise
  • Pulse Compression
  • Random Variables
  • Signal Detection
  • Signal Processing
  • Sonar
  • Targets
  • Warning Systems

Readers

  • Marine Mammal Biology
  • Radar Systems Engineering.