Birds make sounds to communicate, whether to find a potential mate, ward off predators, or just sing for pleasure.
A global study by UW–Madison researchers reveals how habitat, geography, body size, and beak shape influence bird sounds.
A team of UConn College of Engineering (CoE) researchers have achieved a major milestone in the field of phononics with the ...
Wilmington International Airport is currently undergoing a variety of expansion projects to accommodate the uptick in ...
Both beak shape and body mass are also important. In general, smaller birds generate higher frequency sounds, with larger ...
Birds adapt their sounds based on habitat, latitude, and size, with smaller birds using wide frequency ranges to ensure ...
A recent study by UWE Bristol has revealed that road traffic noise can significantly diminish the wellbeing benefits of ...
When sound waves reach the inner ear, neurons there pick up the vibrations and alert the brain. Encoded in their signals is a ...
When we hear sounds, specialized cells in the cochlear nucleus are the first to process that information, enabling our brains ...
The Kurukop echo provides a reference point for a mythological story from the region that speaks about the relationship ...
Research from OHSU, collaborators identifies genes responsible for how the brain processes, perceives sound New research from ...