Dolphin vocalizations can only be understood with direct underwater acoustic two-way interactions, starting with whistles. This app is for that.
This version is in test mode and the custom sound command may not work properly on all devices that it can be installed on, due to changes in most recent versions of Android. Please report issues to [email protected]
Now open-sourced (a GitLab account may be needed to access the software):
https://gitlab.com/leafyseadragon/android-dolphin-comm-ap p
https://gitlab.com/leafyseadragon/android-acoustic-lib
No ads.
Main Capabilities:
Whistle recognition & emission,
100 Hz to 11,000 Hz frequency range,
40 FFTs per second,
1024 voltage samples,
does not require the Internet,
includes a database to be shared,
built-in documentation.
Privacy Policy: The data in this app is private and owned by you, the owner of the device. The publisher, me, does not have access to the data.
This app is experimental and considered to be work-in-progress. It is expected to remain work-in-progress for many years as new features are required while users design new experiments, new discoveries are made, and as new technical capabilities become available from device manufacturers. Advantages: free, inexpensive off-the-shelf devices, designed to be used in water near dolphins at sea, with a customizable recognition algorithm, and expandable features.
Using this app, you may emit one or more whistles and listen to the response by dolphins (the app will show you the sound and try to recognize them for you), then you may reply with your own whistles. Dolphins may also command the device.
User Guide:
Works like a chat or text messaging application, and it emits and recognizes whistles. When the app recognizes a whistle that it already has in its lexicon, it surrounds its name or number by ((( ))), such as ((( hello ))) or ((( 147 ))) and ((( x123 ))). When the app does not recognize a sound as a known whistle, it gives it a number and displays that number without the ((( ))), such as x123. To emit one or more whistles, you type their names or numbers in the edit text box and select the Emit button. After an emission you may repeat it by selecting the Repeat button.
Sample built-in whistles are hello, hello-world, hi, bye, yes, no, m, caret, u, v, w, and wv. You can make your own whistles with a built-in graphical editor.
A spectrogram behind the chat text lets you see the energy of the surrounding sounds in real time.
Main Features:
- Emit whistles selected by the user
- Acquire whistles from the surrounding sounds and keep them in a lexicon
- Recognize whistles; when a whistle is recognized it is identified to the user
- Shows the energy and frequencies of surrounding sounds in a real-time spectrogram
- Shows some of the events of the workings of the app
- Pause and restart the spectrogram in order to observe interesting sound energy patterns
- Perform a self-test where the app can test itself by attempting to recognize emitted whistles
- Hide the chat text in order to better see the spectrogram
- Edit whistles with a graphical editor
- Commands entered by the human user
- Commands in the form of whistles, to be used by dolphins or a second device
- Database to save, export, analyse, and share whistles and other data.
Menu Options:
- Show all Whistles in the lexicon, cetacean-made and man-made whistles
- Show the main Settings
- Show all available Commands
- Show the Database status
- Show a User Guide
- Show an About text
Documentation (much is also in the app):
https://gitlab.com/serge_masse/android-dolphin-comm-doc
Could be used with this underwater tablet (no affiliation):
http://allecoproducts.fi/alltab/... Read more