Colemccallum4281
The evaluation results show that the accuracy can be increased by reducing the time resolution.The Reflections series takes a look back on historical articles from The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America that have had a significant impact on the science and practice of acoustics.Automatic algorithms for the detection and classification of sound are essential to the analysis of acoustic datasets with long duration. Metrics are needed to assess the performance characteristics of these algorithms. Four metrics for performance evaluation are discussed here receiver-operating-characteristic (ROC) curves, detection-error-trade-off (DET) curves, precision-recall (PR) curves, and cost curves. These metrics were applied to the generalized power law detector for blue whale D calls [Helble, Ierley, D'Spain, Roch, and Hildebrand (2012). J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 131(4), 2682-2699] and the click-clustering neural-net algorithm for Cuvier's beaked whale echolocation click detection [Frasier, Roch, Soldevilla, Wiggins, Garrison, and Hildebrand (2017). PLoS Comp. Biol. 13(12), e1005823] using data prepared for the 2015 Detection, Classification, Localization and Density Estimation Workshop. Detection class imbalance, particularly the situation of rare occurrence, is common for long-term passive acoustic monitoring datasets and is a factor in the performance of ROC and DET curves with regard to the impact of false positive detections. PR curves overcome this shortcoming when calculated for individual detections and do not rely on the reporting of true negatives. Cost curves provide additional insight on the effective operating range for the detector based on the a priori probability of occurrence. Use of more than a single metric is helpful in understanding the performance of a detection algorithm.Classical acoustic wave-field representations consist of volume and boundary integrals, of which the integrands contain specific combinations of Green's functions, source distributions, and wave fields. Using a unified matrix-vector wave equation for different wave phenomena, these representations can be reformulated in terms of Green's matrices, source vectors, and wave-field vectors. The matrix-vector formalism also allows the formulation of representations in which propagator matrices replace the Green's matrices. These propagator matrices, in turn, can be expressed in terms of Marchenko-type focusing functions. An advantage of the representations with propagator matrices and focusing functions is that the boundary integrals in these representations are limited to a single open boundary. This makes these representations a suitable basis for developing advanced inverse scattering, imaging and monitoring methods for wave fields acquired on a single boundary.In the present work, the sound transmission through a cylindrical shape acoustic enclosure is predicted analytically and verified experimentally. An analytical model is developed, based on the statistical energy analysis (SEA) approach, to examine the transmission loss of a cylindrical acoustic enclosure in different frequency regions, including the low-, intermediate-, and high-frequency ranges. In the developed model, the nonresonant wave response is included in addition to consideration of the resonant response for obtaining more accurate results. It is demonstrated that the developed SEA formulation in this work can compute the resonant as well as the nonresonant sound transmission of the cylindrical acoustic enclosure separately. To validate the analytical model, an experimental setup was developed, and the sound transmission loss of a cylindrical acoustic enclosure was measured using the sound intensity experimental technique. It was found that the analytical results are in good agreement with the measured transmission loss, especially at the panel ring and critical frequencies. The results obtained indicate that the proposed analytical model is efficient to predict the sound transmission loss of cylindrical acoustic enclosures.Poor laryngeal muscle coordination that results in abnormal glottal posturing is believed to be a primary etiologic factor in common voice disorders such as non-phonotraumatic vocal hyperfunction. Abnormal activity of antagonistic laryngeal muscles is hypothesized to play a key role in the alteration of normal vocal fold biomechanics that results in the dysphonia associated with such disorders. Current low-order models of the vocal folds are unsatisfactory to test this hypothesis since they do not capture the co-contraction of antagonist laryngeal muscle pairs. To address this limitation, a self-sustained triangular body-cover model with full intrinsic muscle control is introduced. The proposed scheme shows good agreement with prior studies using finite element models, excised larynges, and clinical studies in sustained and time-varying vocal gestures. Simulations of vocal fold posturing obtained with distinct antagonistic muscle activation yield clear differences in kinematic, aerodynamic, and acoustic measures. The proposed tool is deemed sufficiently accurate and flexible for future comprehensive investigations of non-phonotraumatic vocal hyperfunction and other laryngeal motor control disorders.This paper describes the aeroacoustics experiments conducted with supersonic jets, exhausting from rectangular nozzles with an aspect ratio of 2, to examine the jet noise reduction by two different methods. The first method involves the use of fluid inserts, which are produced by distributed air blowing into the diverging section of a convergent-divergent exhaust nozzle. The second method involves the integration of fluid shields in dual flow rectangular jets. In the dual flow nozzle, a single shield below the exit is augmented with fluid shields extending on both sides of the rectangular jet. The purpose of the extended bypass flow is to reduce the noise radiated to the sides of a jet aircraft. In addition to the nozzles with the two noise reduction configurations, acoustic measurements are performed with a single flow rectangular jet, referred to as the baseline. In all cases, the jets are operated as overexpanded, shock-containing jets. In some cases, the jets are operated with the core flow mixtures of helium and air to simulate high temperature jets. The far-field noise measurements are performed on an arc with the microphones approximately 70 equivalent nozzle diameters from the nozzle exit. For the purposes of assessing the noise reduction capability of the dual stream jet, comparisons are made with a baseline rectangular jet on an equal thrust per unit exit area basis. The nondimensional acoustic spectra and overall sound pressure level directivities are shown and compared.The acoustic responses of a dynamical system reflect the characteristics of the external excitation and vibrating system. The objective in an identification problem is to characterise the system and excitation from the measured responses. This becomes challenging if the characteristics of the dynamical system are time-varying. The analysis of the acoustic signal generated as a result of the tyre-pavement interaction (TPI) is one such situation, where in order to study the time-varying nature there is a need to obtain the characteristics of the instantaneous response. This study explores the single frequency filtering analysis of signals to examine the time-varying characteristics of tyre-pavement interaction noise (TPIN). Field measurements of TPI acoustic signals were obtained for a two-wheeler driven at different speeds on asphalt and cement concrete pavements. The time-frequency characteristics of the tyre tread impact and of the air cavity resonances are analysed by investigating the effect of vehicular speed and pavement type on TPIN. The specific features of TPIN such as the harmonics due to periodic tread impact and the frequency response due to resonances of the air cavities are examined in detail. The analysis presented in this paper will be useful in developing methods for health monitoring of tyre and pavement systems.Basis function learning is the stepping stone towards effective three-dimensional (3D) sound speed field (SSF) inversion for various acoustic signal processing tasks, including ocean acoustic tomography, underwater target localization/tracking, and underwater communications. Classical basis functions include the empirical orthogonal functions (EOFs), Fourier basis functions, and their combinations. The unsupervised machine learning method, e.g., the K-singular value decomposition (K-SVD) algorithm, has recently tapped into the basis function design, showing better representation performance than the EOFs. However, existing methods do not consider basis function learning approaches that treat 3D SSF data as a third-order tensor, and, thus, cannot fully utilize the 3D interactions/correlations therein. ABT-199 research buy To circumvent such a drawback, basis function learning is linked to tensor decomposition in this paper, which is the primary drive for recent multi-dimensional data mining. In particular, a tensor-based basis function learning framework is proposed, which can include the classical basis functions (using EOFs and/or Fourier basis functions) as its special cases. This provides a unified tensor perspective for understanding and representing 3D SSFs. Numerical results using the South China Sea 3D SSF data have demonstrated the excellent performance of the tensor-based basis functions.Static analysis is performed for fiber windings to quantitatively control the radial stress at the outer radius of the piezoelectric ceramic tube. The radial stress is verified both experimentally and theoretically, and the dependence of the resonant and material properties of the piezoelectric ceramic tubes on the radial stress is clarified. The resonance frequencies and dielectric loss remain relatively stable, but the relative permittivity and the short circuit elastic constant decrease with the radial stress. The variations of the increased bandwidth and decreased electromechanical coupling coefficient (k31), piezoelectric constant (d31 and g31), and mechanical quality factor (Qm) are associated with the height-to-radius ratio. The properties of three cylindrical transducers applied with various radial stress show similar change tendencies, and a difference of 0.34 MPa radial stress results in a variation of approximately 13 in the bandwidth, 14 in Qm, 15 in k31, d31, and g31, and 16 in the amplitude of the first pulse. These results suggest that the consistency of the radial stress is essential, and it should be relatively small. These findings guide the design and preparation of the enhanced transducer.A metamaterial of particular interest for underwater applications is the three-dimensional (3D) anisotropic pentamode (PM), i.e., a structure designed to support a single longitudinal wave with a sound speed that depends on the propagation direction. The present work attempts to experimentally verify anisotropic sound speeds predicted by finite element simulations using additively manufactured anisotropic 3D PM samples made of titanium. The samples were suspended in front of a plane wave source emitting a broadband chirp in a water tank to measure time of flight for wavefronts with and without the PM present. The measurement utilizes a deconvolution method that extracts the band limited impulse response of data gathered by a scanning hydrophone in a plane of constant depth behind the samples. Supporting material takes the form of finite element simulations developed to model the response of a semi-infinite PM medium to an incident normal plane wave. A technique to extract the longitudinal PM wave speed for frequency domain simulations based on Fourier series expansions is given.