RESPONSE TIMES OF ODONTOCETE CETACEANS IN AUDIOMETRIC TESTS - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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RESPONSE TIMES OF ODONTOCETE CETACEANS IN AUDIOMETRIC TESTS

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(bottlenose dolphins & white whales) Hearing Test with Multiple ... These two dolphins were later tested and found to have a hearing loss at these frequencies. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: RESPONSE TIMES OF ODONTOCETE CETACEANS IN AUDIOMETRIC TESTS


1
RESPONSE TIMES OF ODONTOCETE CETACEANS IN
AUDIOMETRIC TESTS
  • Diane J. Blackwood

2
Overview
  • Response Time review
  • Hearing Test
  • Subject Species
  • Methods
  • Results
  • Listening Task
  • Comparison of Results
  • Conclusions

3
Response Times
  • Interval from the beginning of a stimulus to the
    beginning of the subjects response
  • Work has been done on humans, some terrestrial
    mammals and some birds
  • Response times provide information about
    perceptual processes
  • Response times for this study were collected as
    part of an audiometric test of cetaceans and
    during a separate listening task

4
Response Time History
  • 1700s Astronomy human RT
  • 1850 Helmholtz measures nerve conduction with RT
  • 1868 Donders subtractive method to cognitive
    function
  • 1913 Well review
  • 1930 Loudness defined
  • 1948 Shannon Information Theory
  • 1953 Hick Hyman Choice Reaction Times
  • 1960 Use on non-verbal humans and faking
  • 1960s and 1970s Applied to non-humans

5
Response Time vs. Stimulus Amplitude (humans)
Kohfeld, Santee Wallace (1981)
from Kohfeld, Santee Wallace (1981)
6
Loudness and Latency Curves
7
Methods Hearing Test
  • Masked hearing tests
  • Six frequencies from 400 Hz to 30 kHz
  • Method of Free Response
  • Staircase method of stimulus presentation
  • Reversal criterion
  • Automated response detection
  • Analysis
  • Analyzed 53,763 responses where human computer
    algorithm agreed
  • Response times vs test tone amplitude

8
Subjects hearing test
9
Sam H. Ridgway
NOC
MUK
10
Atlantic Bottlenose Dolphin
(Tursiops truncatus)
11
Audiograms(bottlenose dolphins white whales)
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17
Hearing Test with Multiple Dives
18
Timing for Hearing Tasks
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Screen 2 Correctly found low intensity response
NOC84A00.Pix.11
Screen 3 Incorrectly missed response buried in
pulses
NOC86005.Pix.11
Screen 4 Autodetect scored part of pulse as
response
NOC85105.Pix.11
22
BEN86H01.Pix.1t
Screen 5 Correctly indicated no-response to
visible tone
BEN86T01.Pix.4
Screen 6 Correctly found response after visible
tone
NEM81E02.Pix.15
Screen 7 Correctly indicated no-response with
large bust pulse
23
Classification Performance
24
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25
Hearing Test Frequency Polygon
26
SRT - Hearing Test
27
Hearing Test - Allometry
28
Whistle Amplitude Hearing Test
29
Whistle Length Hearing Test
30
Effects of Masking Level
31
Response Time BEN 4.5 kHz
32
Response Time MUK 6 kHz
33
Response Time - NEM
34
Listening Task
  • The listening task was actually done first.
  • Stimuli were well above threshold.
  • Stimuli varied in amplitude, duration and
    frequency.
  • No masking noise.

35
Listening Subject Data
36
Listening Frequency Polygon
37
Listening
38
Listening
39
Listening
40
Multiple Frequencies as more information or a
complex task
  • Both of my studies were Simple Response Time
  • Others studies have looked at Choice Response
    Time
  • Hick and Hyman (1953) suggested Choice Response
    Time increases with increasing numbers of choices
  • Do multiple frequency data sets convey more
    information?

41
APR at 100 ms 40 kHz
42
MAU 40kHz 100ms
43
MAY 40kHz 100ms
44
SLA 40kHz 100ms
45
TOD 40kHz 100ms
46
Effects of Duration
47
MAU 40kHz
48
MAY 120 dB
49
Increased Response Time to High Frequency Stimuli
  • Two subjects MAU and MAY showed greatly increased
    response time to high frequencies
  • These two dolphins were later tested and found to
    have a hearing loss at these frequencies.
  • This shift in response time is consistent with
    response times as a reflection of perceived
    loudness.

50
MAU 100ms 120dB
51
MAY 100ms duration
52
Comparison of Listening Task and Hearing Test
53
Compare Dolphins
54
Compare Whales
55
Listening Task vs Hearing Test
56
Hearing Test
  • Response time generally decreased with increasing
    tone amplitude as in terrestrial animals.
  • First look at the effect of masking noise on
    response times in marine mammals.
  • Masking shifted hearing threshold and response
    times to high amplitude stimuli, response times
    were similar relative to threshold.

57
Listening Task
  • The listening task looked at SRT well above
    threshold
  • There was no masking noise
  • Varied Duration, Frequency Amplitude of test
    tones
  • Effect of duration not clear, but duration did
    not vary within the same session

58
Discussion
  • Differences between species
  • - suggestive of longer transmit times for a
    larger animal?
  • - Or differences in life history
  • -- prey type
  • -- movement types, in-air jumps

59
Conclusions
  • Bottlenose dolphins have shorter response times
    (410 ms) than white whales (670 ms) in a
    hearing test
  • Bottlenose dolphins have shorter response times
    (230ms) than white whales (580ms) during a
    listening task
  • Subjects were faster and more consistent after
    training
  • Increased masking noise shifts both threshold and
    response times.
  • Animals were faster within a notch in the masking
    noise

60
Cont.
  • Response times are indicative of timing of
    perceptual and motor processes in the subjects
  • Response times may be used as estimates of
    perception of loudness
  • Effects of masking noise may be similar to
    natural and anthropogenic noise in the ocean.

61
Acknowledgments
  • Our funding sponsor, Tim McBride, Program
    Executive Office, USW
  • Don Carder Carolyn Schlundt
  • Trainers Tricia Kamolnick, Mark Todd, Jennifer
    Carr, Monica Chaplin
  • Computer support Wesley Elsberry Jim Finneran

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