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Avian Visitors

I wanted to do something similar to this, then I started doing some research on birds in general, and those in my locality, then I started learning about Audio and spectograms and Nyquist Theorem and many other interesting audio stuff.

Then I started going through the Intro to Conservation Bioacoustics by Cornell course, and started watching Bioacoustic Talks by the K. Lisa Yang Center cornell center.

And now I am almost at the point where I cant start manually tagging audio sets, for target species so that I can train custom classifiers to identify birds in Rwanda which are poorly detected by birdnet.

TLDR: Being jobless can lead you into interesting ventures.

* Nyquist Theorem. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IZJQXlbm2dU

* Intro to Conservation Bioacoustics https://www.birds.cornell.edu/ccb/pam-materials

* Bioacoustic Talks https://www.youtube.com/@CornellSounds

5 hours agokiproping

Do you think the same could be used for other cases? I'm thinking about detecting problems with cars (vehicles) just by the noise they make

2 hours agois_true

Thanks for sharing these resources and your story! I followed a very similar path, and ended up doing a biodiversity related MSc, with my dissertation being a custom classifier for poorly detected species in Príncipe. BirdNET and Perch are phenomenal achievements, but struggle in regions where, ironically, most of the world’s biodiversity is. What you’re doing for Rwandan species is so important!!

5 hours agojna_sh

Excellent kachō-e prompt - working on something similar and found it hard to get the right balance between sharp outlines and watercolors, and especially plant morphology is dicey (eg plants like Cacao that fruit from the trunk instead of branch tips).

Did anyone come across projects that also nail that aspect well?

3 hours agobrunohaid

I'm enjoying tracking the local wildlife with my bird listening station.

There's also an excellent alternative to BirdNet-Pi that runs well on non-Raspberry-Pi machines: https://github.com/tphakala/birdnet-go

6 hours agobartman

Birdnet-go is really good and actively maintained. Shout out to tphakala.

5 hours agokiproping
[deleted]
an hour ago

Wholesome