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In the Rayleigh and stochastic frequency regimes, the directional velocity change shows proportionalities to the two elastic scattering factors even for the polycrystal with the triclinic grain symmetry.This study examined how multiple measures based on the electrically evoked compound action potential (ECAP) amplitude-growth functions (AGFs) were related to estimates of neural [spiral ganglion neuron (SGN) density and cell size] and electrode impedance measures in 34 specific pathogen free pigmented guinea pigs that were chronically implanted (4.9-15.4 months) with a cochlear implant electrode array. Two interphase gaps (IPGs) were used for the biphasic pulses and the effect of the IPG on each ECAP measure was measured ("IPG effect"). When using a stimulus with a constant IPG, SGN density was related to the across-subject variance in ECAP AGF linear slope, peak amplitude, and N1 latency. The SGN density values also help to explain a significant proportion of variance in the IPG effect for AGF linear slope and peak amplitude measures. Regression modeling revealed that SGN density was the primary dependent variable contributing to across-subject variance for ECAP measures; SGN cell size did not significantly improve the fitting of the model. Results showed that simple impedance measures were weakly related to most ECAP measures but did not typically improve the fit of the regression model.A triple beamformer was developed to exploit the capabilities of the binaural auditory system. The goal was to enhance the perceptual segregation of spatially separated sound sources while preserving source localization. The triple beamformer comprised a variant of a standard single-channel beamformer that routes the primary beam output focused on the target source location to both ears. The triple beam algorithm adds two supplementary beams with the left-focused beam routed only to the left ear and the right-focused beam routed only to the right ear. The rationale for the approach is that the triple beam processing exploits sound source segregation in high informational masking (IM) conditions. Furthermore, the exaggerated interaural level differences produced by the triple beam are well-suited for categories of listeners (e.g., bilateral cochlear implant users) who receive limited benefit from interaural time differences. The performance with the triple beamformer was compared to normal binaural hearing (simulated using a Knowles Electronic Manikin for Auditory Research, G.R.A.S. Sound and Vibration, Holte, DK) and to that obtained from a single-channel beamformer. Source localization in azimuth and masked speech identification for multiple masker locations were measured for all three algorithms. Taking both localization and speech intelligibility into account, the triple beam algorithm was considered to be advantageous under high IM listening conditions.Little is known about localized, near-field soundscapes during offshore hydrocarbon drilling campaigns. In the Dogger Bank, North Sea, underwater noise recordings were made 41-60 m from the drill stem of the Noble Kolskaya jack-up exploration drilling rig. The aims were to document noise received levels (RLs) and frequency characteristics of rig-associated near-field noise. The rig produced sound pressure levels (SPLs) of 120 dB re 1 μPa in the frequency range of 2-1400 Hz. Over transient periods, RLs varied by 15-20 dB between softest (holding) and noisiest (drilling) operations. Tonal components at different frequencies varied with depth. Support vessel noise was significantly louder than the jack-up rig at frequencies less then 1 kHz, even in its noisiest "boulder-drilling" phase, though radiated noise levels were higher above 2 kHz. Rig SPLs fell rapidly above 8 kHz. Marine mammals, such as harbor porpoise (Phocoena phocoena) forage regularly near offshore oil and gas rigs and platforms, and it is predicted that animals experience different noise regimes while traversing the water column and can potentially detect the higher-frequency components of drilling noise to a distance of 70 m from the source; however, while levels were unlikely to cause auditory injury, effects on echolocation behavior are still unknown.This paper presents the results of an articulatory study of palatalized consonants in Polish, a language with a typologically rare concentration of two phonemic series of posterior sibilants, one inherently palatalized, and the other contextually (allophonically) palatalized. For both phonemic and allophonic palatalization in Polish, it was found that the most stable correlates of palatalization are the advancement of the tongue root and a combined effect of raising and fronting of the tongue body. The advancement of the tongue root can be interpreted as the driving force in palatalization, while the effect of tongue body fronting and raising can be seen as secondary, resulting from the movement of the tongue root and the characteristic of the tongue as a muscular hydrostat.The present work assessed Mandarin sentence understanding when the electric and acoustic portions are not temporally aligned in simulated combined electric-and-acoustic stimulation (EAS). A relative time shift was added between the electric and acoustic portions, simulating the temporal misalignment effect in EAS processing. The processed stimuli were played to normal-hearing listeners to recognize. Experimental results showed a significant decrease of the intelligibility score caused by the temporal misalignment in the two portions of EAS processing, suggesting the need to avoid temporal misalignment in EAS. The preceding acoustic-portion more significantly decreased the understanding of EAS-processed Mandarin stimuli than the preceding electric-portion.This study investigated the effects of hearing loss and hearing experience on the acoustic features of infant-directed speech (IDS) to infants with hearing loss (HL) compared to controls with normal hearing (NH) matched by either chronological or hearing age (experiment 1) and across development in infants with hearing loss as well as the relation between IDS features and infants' developing lexical abilities (experiment 2). Both experiments included detailed acoustic analyses of mothers' productions of the three corner vowels /a, i, u/ and utterance-level pitch in IDS and in adult-directed speech. Experiment 1 demonstrated that IDS to infants with HL was acoustically more variable than IDS to hearing-age matched infants with NH. Experiment 2 yielded no changes in IDS features over development; however, the results did show a positive relationship between formant distances in mothers' speech and infants' concurrent receptive vocabulary size, as well as between vowel hyperarticulation and infants' expressive vocabulary. These findings suggest that despite infants' HL and thus diminished access to speech input, infants with HL are exposed to IDS with generally similar acoustic qualities as are infants with NH. However, some differences persist, indicating that infants with HL might receive less intelligible speech.The recent explosion in the availability of echosounder data from diverse ocean platforms has created unprecedented opportunities to observe the marine ecosystems at broad scales. However, the critical lack of methods capable of automatically discovering and summarizing prominent spatio-temporal echogram structures has limited the effective and wider use of these rich datasets. To address this challenge, a data-driven methodology is developed based on matrix decomposition that builds compact representation of long-term echosounder time series using intrinsic features in the data. In a two-stage approach, noisy outliers are first removed from the data by principal component pursuit, then a temporally smooth nonnegative matrix factorization is employed to automatically discover a small number of distinct daily echogram patterns, whose time-varying linear combination (activation) reconstructs the dominant echogram structures. This low-rank representation provides biological information that is more tractable and interpretable than the original data, and is suitable for visualization and systematic analysis with other ocean variables. Unlike existing methods that rely on fixed, handcrafted rules, this unsupervised machine learning approach is well-suited for extracting information from data collected from unfamiliar or rapidly changing ecosystems. This work forms the basis for constructing robust time series analytics for large-scale, acoustics-based biological observation in the ocean.The problem of two-dimensional acoustic scattering of time-harmonic plane waves by a multi-ringed cylindrical resonator is considered. The resonator is made up of an arbitrary number of concentric sound-hard split rings with zero thickness. Each ring opening is oriented in any direction. The acoustics pressure field in each layered region enclosed between adjacent rings is described by an eigenfunction expansion in polar coordinates. An integral equation/Galerkin method is used to relate the unknown coefficients of the expansions between adjacent regions separated by a ring. The multiple scattering problem is then formulated as a reflection/transmission problem between the layers, which is solved using an efficient iterative scheme. An exploration of the parameter space is conducted to determine first, the conditions under which the lowest resonant frequency can be minimised, and second, how non-trivial resonances of the multi-ring resonators can be explained from those of simpler arrangements, such as a single-ring resonator. It is found here that increasing the number of rings while alternating the orientation lowers the first resonant frequency, and exhibits a dense and nearly regular resonant structure that is analogous to the rainbow trapping effect.All acoustic sources are of finite spatial extent. In volumetric wave-based simulation approaches (including, e.g., the finite difference time domain method among many others), a direct approach is to represent such continuous source distributions in terms of a collection of point-like sources at grid locations. Such a representation requires interpolation over the grid and leads to common staircasing effects, particularly under rotation or translation of the distribution. In this article, a different representation is shown, based on a spherical harmonic representation of a given distribution. The source itself is decoupled from any particular arrangement of grid points, and is compactly represented as a series of filter responses used to drive a canonical set of source terms, each activating a given spherical harmonic directivity pattern. Such filter responses are derived for a variety of commonly encountered distributions. Simulation results are presented, illustrating various features of such a representation, including convergence, behaviour under rotation, the extension to the time varying case, and differences in computational cost relative to standard grid-based source representations.Matched filter (MF) and conventional beamforming (CBF) are widely used in active sonar; the performance of the former (temporal resolution) is limited by the signal bandwidth, and that of the latter (angular resolution) is limited by the array aperture. Previous work has shown that angular resolution can be significantly improved by deconvolving the CBF outputs. In this paper, deconvolution is extended to the time domain by deconvolving the MF outputs, and a high-resolution two-dimensional deconvolution method is proposed to simultaneously improve the temporal and angular resolution. Numerical simulations and experimental tank data show that angular resolutions are improved 26 times, and temporal resolutions are improved 10 times compared with the conventional MF and CBF methods. Reverberations are much suppressed to allow target echoes to be detected from the received time series data.

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