Guo, Huimin; Jian, Haifang; Wang, Yiyu; Wang, Hongchang; Zheng, Shuaikang; Cheng, Qinghua; Li, Yuehao Source: Applied Intelligence, 2024;

Abstract:

Abstract: Bird species monitoring is important for the preservation of biological diversity because it provides fundamental information for biodiversity assessment and protection. Automatic acoustic recognition is considered to be an essential technology for realizing automatic monitoring of bird species. Current deep learning-based bird sound recognition methods do not fully conduct long-term correlation modeling along both the time and frequency axes of the spectrogram. Additionally, these methods have not completely studied the impact of different scales of features on the final recognition. To solve the abovementioned problems, we propose a Conformer-based dual path joint modeling network (CDPNet) for bird sound recognition. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first attempt to adopt Conformer in the bird sound recognition task. Specifically, the proposed CDPNet mainly consists of a dual-path time-frequency joint modeling module (DPTFM) and a multi-scale feature fusion module (MSFFM). The former aims to simultaneously capture time-frequency local features, long-term time dependence, and long-term frequency dependence to better model bird sound characteristics effectively. The latter is designed to improve recognition accuracy by fusing different scales of features. The proposed algorithm is implemented on an edge computing platform, NVIDIA Jetson Nano, to build a real-time bird sound recognition monitoring system. The ablation experimental results verify the benefit of using the DPTFM and the MSFFM. Through training and testing on the Semibirdaudio dataset containing 27,155 sound clips and the public Birdsdata dataset, the proposed CDPNet outperforms the other state-of-the-art models in terms of F1-score, precision, recall, and accuracy. Graphical abstract: (Figure presented.).

© The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature 2024. (68 refs.)