Happy new year! I wanted to share my new Python package called chatter that streamlines the process of applying AI/ML models to animal communication π¦π¦ππ΅π¨βπΎ masonyoungblood.github.io/chatter/
Happy new year! I wanted to share my new Python package called chatter that streamlines the process of applying AI/ML models to animal communication π¦π¦ππ΅π¨βπΎ masonyoungblood.github.io/chatter/
hand drawn animal images by tecumseh fitch
I am very proud of the artwork on the cover of our recent Phil Trans issue on consciousness. It is based on watercolor paintings and ink drawings on paper I did myself, based on published diagrams by recognized experts on comparative brain anatomy (detailed in the caption which it seems no one read)
Still scratching my head about whether female #magnificentriflebirds display back at males or if all those copulations Iβve filmed actually involve immature males
"Unsung Songbirds: Advances in the Study of Corvid Communication" - a new review paper (preprint) https://ecoevorxiv.org/repository/view/10600/ Corvids are amazing, so I'm v pleased to be a small part of this review led by Claudia Wascher and Valerie Dufour. #corvids #bioacoustics
And lastly, thanks a lot to @timsainburg.bsky.social for his valuable input and proposing to use Leiden community detection!
And thank you to everyone involved in the poster: Jonas Lesigang, Sonia Kleindorfer and Tecumseh Fitch. And @alperyelimlies.bsky.social who gave me a lot of valuable feedback on the poster design.
Me with my poster on the greylag goose vocal repertoire and how data representation types influence the predictions of unsupervised methods
Thank you to everyone at #ibac2025 for this amazing conference. I met so many great people and learned a lot about so many interesting projects. Excited to see you all again some time! And proud that my poster got the student poster price βΊοΈ stay tuned for the publication!
Illustration of female and male yellow warblers and their respective songs. On top, two duets are shown in spectrograms with male parts marked in red and female parts marked in yellow. On the left are three female songs and on the right are three different male songs. Illustrations are courtesy of Lena Gies.
Excited to share our new preprint!
Unlike the North American yellow warblers, females in GalΓ‘pagos commonly sing and duet with their paired partners. Here, we tested possible functions with a playback experiment: www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...