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Journals Journal of the Acoustical Soci...

Journal of the Acoustical Society of America

https://read.qxmd.com/read/38573055/time-resolved-measurement-of-acoustic-density-fluctuations-using-a-phase-shifting-mach-zehnder-interferometer
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Eita Shoji, Anis Maddi, Guillaume Penelet, Tetsushi Biwa
Phase-shifting interferometry is one of the optical measurement techniques that improves accuracy and resolution by incorporating a controlled phase shift into conventional optical interferometry. In this study, a four-step phase-shifting interferometer is developed to measure the spatiotemporal distribution of acoustic density oscillations of the gas next to a rigid plate. The experimental apparatus consists of a polarizing Mach-Zehnder interferometer with a polarization camera capable of capturing four polarization directions in one shot image and it is used to measure the magnitude and the phase of density fluctuations through a duct of rectangular cross section connected to a loudspeaker...
April 1, 2024: Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38573054/nonspherical-oscillations-of-an-encapsulated-microbubble-with-interface-energy-under-the-acoustic-field
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nehal Dash, Ganesh Tamadapu
Spherical instability in acoustically driven encapsulated microbubbles (EBs) suspended in a fluid can trigger nonspherical oscillations within them. We apply the interface energy model [N. Dash and G. Tamadapu, J. Fluid Mech. 932, A26 (2022b)] to investigate nonspherical oscillations of smaller radius microbubbles encapsulated with a viscoelastic shell membrane under acoustic field. Using the Lagrangian energy formulation, coupled governing equations for spherical and nonspherical modes are derived, incorporating interface energy effects, shell elasticity, and viscosity...
April 1, 2024: Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38568143/how-to-vocode-using-channel-vocoders-for-cochlear-implant-research
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Margaret Cychosz, Matthew B Winn, Matthew J Goupell
The channel vocoder has become a useful tool to understand the impact of specific forms of auditory degradation-particularly the spectral and temporal degradation that reflect cochlear-implant processing. Vocoders have many parameters that allow researchers to answer questions about cochlear-implant processing in ways that overcome some logistical complications of controlling for factors in individual cochlear implant users. However, there is such a large variety in the implementation of vocoders that the term "vocoder" is not specific enough to describe the signal processing used in these experiments...
April 1, 2024: Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38568142/understanding-the-relationship-between-the-bering-sea-cold-pool-and-vocal-presence-of-odontocetes-in-the-context-of-climate-changea
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jennifer L Miksis-Olds, Kerri D Seger, Jennifer J Johnson
The Cold Pool is a subsurface layer with water temperatures below 2 °C that is formed in the eastern Bering Sea. This oceanographic feature of relatively cooler bottom temperature impacts zooplankton and forage fish dynamics, driving different energetic pathways dependent upon Bering Sea climatic regime. Odontocetes echolocate to find prey, so tracking foraging vocalizations acoustically provides information to understand the implications of climate change on Cold Pool variability influencing regional food web processes...
April 1, 2024: Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38563625/introduction-to-the-special-issue-on-fish-bioacoustics-hearing-and-sound-communicationa
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Arthur N Popper, Clara Amorim, Michael L Fine, Dennis M Higgs, Allen F Mensinger, Joseph A Sisneros
Fish bioacoustics, or the study of fish hearing, sound production, and acoustic communication, was discussed as early as Aristotle. However, questions about how fishes hear were not really addressed until the early 20th century. Work on fish bioacoustics grew after World War II and considerably in the 21st century since investigators, regulators, and others realized that anthropogenic (human-generated sounds), which had primarily been of interest to workers on marine mammals, was likely to have a major impact on fishes (as well as on aquatic invertebrates)...
April 1, 2024: Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38563624/verification-of-acoustic-streaming-measurement-accuracy-via-particle-image-velocimetry-considering-the-interrogation-window-aspect-ratio
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Hiroki Yanai, Kazuto Kuzuu, Shinya Hasegawa
This study measured Rayleigh and Schlichting streaming velocities via particle image velocimetry (PIV) in a standing wave field. Emphasis was placed on balancing high measurement accuracy with high spatial resolution in the boundary layer region. We aimed to achieve high resolution and enhanced measurement accuracy, typically a trade-off, by significantly increasing the aspect ratio of the interrogation window in the flow direction during PIV post-processing. The experiment operated under conditions with a duct axis streaming velocity of approximately 8...
April 1, 2024: Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38563623/accurate-species-classification-of-arctic-toothed-whale-echolocation-clicks-using-one-third-octave-ratios
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Marie J Zahn, Michael Ladegaard, Malene Simon, Kathleen M Stafford, Taiki Sakai, Kristin L Laidre
Passive acoustic monitoring has been an effective tool to study cetaceans in remote regions of the Arctic. Here, we advance methods to acoustically identify the only two Arctic toothed whales, the beluga (Delphinapterus leucas) and narwhal (Monodon monoceros), using echolocation clicks. Long-term acoustic recordings collected from moorings in Northwest Greenland were analyzed. Beluga and narwhal echolocation signals were distinguishable using spectrograms where beluga clicks had most energy >30 kHz and narwhal clicks had a sharp lower frequency limit near 20 kHz...
April 1, 2024: Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38558083/speech-perception-as-information-processing
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Melissa A Redford
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.
April 1, 2024: Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38557739/automated-approach-for-recovering-modal-components-in-shallow-waters
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Angèle Niclas, Josselin Garnier
This paper proposes a fully automated method for recovering modal components from a signal in shallow waters. The scenario involves an unknown source emitting low-frequency sound waves in a shallow water environment, and a single hydrophone recording the signal. The proposed automated algorithm is based on the warping method to separate each modal component in the time-frequency space. However, instead of manually choosing a single arrival time for extraction, the method performs successive extractions with automated time selection based on an explicit quality factor...
April 1, 2024: Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38557738/shear-wave-speeds-in-a-nearly-incompressible-fibrous-material-with-two-unequal-fiber-families
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Shuaihu Wang, Ruth J Okamoto, Matthew D J McGarry, Philip V Bayly
The mechanical properties of soft biological tissues can be characterized non-invasively by magnetic resonance elastography (MRE). In MRE, shear wave fields are induced by vibration, imaged by magnetic resonance imaging, and inverted to estimate tissue properties in terms of the parameters of an underlying material model. Most MRE studies assume an isotropic material model; however, biological tissue is often anisotropic with a fibrous structure, and some tissues contain two or more families of fibers-each with different orientations and properties...
April 1, 2024: Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38557737/musical-instruments-as-dynamic-sound-sources
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
David Ackermann, Fabian Brinkmann, Stefan Weinzierl
Unlike electro-acoustic sound sources, musical instruments have a time-varying, dynamic directivity, due to the note-dependent radiation behavior of the instrument and due to the expressive movements that musicians perform with their instrument. While previous studies have generally examined the directivity of the static, unmoved instrument for specific notes played, we show the individual and combined contributions of these two factors to a temporal modulation of the radiation behavior, based on motion tracking of typical movement patterns for all instruments of a classical symphony orchestra and on the directivity measured for all partials over the entire pitch range of these instruments...
April 1, 2024: Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38557736/reduced-complexity-for-sound-zones-with-subband-block-adaptive-filters-and-a-loudspeaker-line-array
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Martin B Møller, Jorge Martinez, Jan Østergaard
Sound zones are used to reproduce individual audio content to multiple people in a room using a set of loudspeakers with controllable input signals. To allow the reproduction of individual audio to dynamically change, e.g., due to moving listeners, changes in the number of listeners, or changing room transfer functions, an adaptive formulation is proposed. This formulation is based on frequency domain block adaptive filters and given room transfer functions. To reduce computational complexity, the system is extended to subband processing without cross-adaptive filters...
April 1, 2024: Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38557735/articulatory-and-acoustic-dynamics-of-fronted-back-vowels-in-american-english
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jonathan Havenhill
Fronting of the vowels /u, ʊ, o/ is observed throughout most North American English varieties, but has been analyzed mainly in terms of acoustics rather than articulation. Because an increase in F2, the acoustic correlate of vowel fronting, can be the result of any gesture that shortens the front cavity of the vocal tract, acoustic data alone do not reveal the combination of tongue fronting and/or lip unrounding that speakers use to produce fronted vowels. It is furthermore unresolved to what extent the articulation of fronted back vowels varies according to consonantal context and how the tongue and lips contribute to the F2 trajectory throughout the vowel...
April 1, 2024: Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38557734/absorptive-nature-of-scattering-coefficients-in-stress-energy-tensor-formalism-for-room-acoustics
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jean-Dominique Polack, Hugo Dujourdy, Roland Badeau
In the stress-energy tensor formalism, the symmetry between absorption and scattering coefficients, as proven by measurements combined with simulations, is counterintuitive. By introducing the wall admittance, we show that the scattering coefficient is partly created by the real part of the wall admittance combined with the active intensity, that is, is partly due to absorption. However, for curved surfaces or finite source distances, it also depends on the imaginary part of the wall admittance in combination with the reactive intensity, which confers its genuine scattering properties inversely proportional to the distances to the sources...
April 1, 2024: Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38546169/directivity-of-horns-mounted-in-finite-enclosures-a-multimodal-formulation
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Hao Dong, Jean-Baptiste Doc, Simon Félix
The beamwidth is a primary directivity metric for the design of a constant directivity horn. To date, investigations on this property have predominantly been restricted to the half-space radiation or idealized geometries. This paper examines the beamwidth behavior of an axisymmetric horn mounted in a finite cylindrical enclosure by proposing an elegant multimodal solution to the far-field directivity pattern. The variation of beamwidth is examined for the frequency, dimensions of the enclosure, and shape of the horn...
March 1, 2024: Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38536062/finite-difference-embedded-unet-for-solving-transcranial-ultrasound-frequency-domain-wavefield
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Linfeng Wang, Jian Li, Shili Chen, Zheng Fan, Zhoumo Zeng, Yang Liu
Transcranial ultrasound imaging assumes a growing significance in the detection and monitoring of intracranial lesions and cerebral blood flow. Accurate solution of partial differential equation (PDE) is one of the prerequisites for obtaining transcranial ultrasound wavefields. Grid-based numerical solvers such as finite difference (FD) and finite element methods have limitations including high computational costs and discretization errors. Purely data-driven methods have relatively high demands on training datasets...
March 1, 2024: Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38535629/dolphin-short-term-auditory-fatigue-and-self-mitigation
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
James J Finneran, Katelin Lally, Jason Mulsow, Dorian S Houser
Auditory brainstem responses (ABRs) were measured at 57 kHz in two dolphins warned of an impending intense tone at 40 kHz. Over the course of testing, the duration of the intense tone was increased from 0.5 to 16 s to determine if changes in ABRs observed after cessation of the intense sound were the result of post-stimulatory auditory fatigue or conditioned hearing attenuation. One dolphin exhibited conditioned hearing attenuation after the warning sound preceding the intense sound, but little evidence of post-stimulatory fatigue after the intense sound...
March 1, 2024: Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38535628/analytical-solutions-for-single-and-multiple-scattering-from-rib-stiffened-plates-in-water
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Hesam Bakhtiary Yekta, Andrew N Norris
The interaction of an acoustic plane wave with a pair of plates connected by periodically spaced stiffeners in water is considered. The rib-stiffened structure is called a "flex-layer" because its low frequency response is dominated by bending stiffness. The quasi-static behavior is equivalent to a homogeneous layer of compressible fluid, which we identify as air for the purposes of comparison. In this way, an air layer is acoustically the same as a pair of thin elastic plates connected by a periodic spacing of ribs...
March 1, 2024: Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38530014/childaugment-data-augmentation-methods-for-zero-resource-children-s-speaker-verification
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Vishwanath Pratap Singh, Md Sahidullah, Tomi Kinnunen
The accuracy of modern automatic speaker verification (ASV) systems, when trained exclusively on adult data, drops substantially when applied to children's speech. The scarcity of children's speech corpora hinders fine-tuning ASV systems for children's speech. Hence, there is a timely need to explore more effective ways of reusing adults' speech data. One promising approach is to align vocal-tract parameters between adults and children through children-specific data augmentation, referred here to as ChildAugment...
March 1, 2024: Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38530013/the-influence-of-frequency-volume-and-viscosity-on-the-ultrasonic-atomization-threshold-of-sessile-droplets
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Josué Meneses-Díaz, Yolanda Vargas-Hernández, Eduardo Cancino-Jaque, Luis Gaete-Garretón
In this research, we present a study on the atomization threshold (ATh) of sessile droplets, analyzing its relationship with the excitation frequency fexc (55-48 kHz), droplet volume Vdrop (1-100 μl), and droplet viscosity μ (1-6 mPa⋅s). The investigation focused on the atomization thresholds using ultrasonic excitation of distilled water droplets and water- polyethylene glycol (PEG)-8000 mixtures deposited on vibrating surfaces. The obtained results are compared with previously reported theoretical models...
March 1, 2024: Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
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