Modeling and Frequency Tracking of Marine Mammal Whistle Calls

Abstract

Marine mammal whistle calls present an attractive medium for covert underwater communications. High quality models of the whistle calls are needed in order to synthesize natural-sounding whistles with embedded information. Since the whistle calls are composed of frequency modulated harmonic tones, they are best modeled as a weighted superposition of harmonically related sinusoids. Previous research with bottlenose dolphin whistle calls has produced synthetic whistles that sound too "clean" for use in a covert communications system. Due to the sensitivity of the human auditory system, watermarking schemes that slightly modify the fundamental frequency contour have good potential for producing natural-sounding whistles embedded with retrievable watermarks. Structured total least squares is used with linear prediction analysis to track the time-varying fundamental frequency and harmonic amplitude contours throughout a whistle call. Simulation and experimental results demonstrate the capability to accurately model bottlenose dolphin whistle calls and retrieve embedded information from watermarked synthetic whistle calls.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Feb 01, 2009
Accession Number
ADA541675

Entities

People

  • Jared Severson

Organizations

  • Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Energy and Power Technologies

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Acoustic Communications
  • Acoustics
  • Algorithms
  • Applied Mathematics
  • Computational Complexity
  • Detection
  • Estimators
  • Frequency Shift
  • Information Science
  • Information Theory
  • Kalman Filters
  • Mathematical Filters
  • Modulation
  • Phase Modulation
  • Signal Processing
  • Speech Compression
  • Underwater Acoustic Communications

Readers

  • Adaptive Control and Estimation with Uncertainty in Dynamic Systems.
  • Computer Vision.
  • Marine Mammal Biology