Dear colleagues,

We are pleased to announce that the following paper is now available online:

Cranford, T. W., Trijoulet, V., Smith, C. R., and Krysl, P. (2014). "Validation 
of a vibroacoustic finite element model using bottlenose dolphin simulations: 
The dolphin biosonar beam is focused in stages," Bioacoustics 23(2), 161-194. 
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09524622.2013.843061


Abstract:
Psychoacoustic laboratory studies with live dolphins require considerable 
resources and are essential for assessing the validity of our models. 
Computerized numerical modelling methods are a reasonable approach to simulate 
the vibroacoustic functions of the dolphin biosonar apparatus. In order to 
validate this approach, we chose a vibroacoustic finite element model to 
simulate sound production and sound beam formation in the bottlenose dolphin 
(Tursiops truncatus), based on computed tomography scans from live and 
postmortem dolphins. The right and left dorsal bursae were assumed to be 
potential sound sources. The simulations confirm several hypotheses: (1) the 
shape of the skull plays a role in the formation of the sound transmission 
beam; (2) the melon appears to concentrate the acoustic energy by a factor of 
four in the transmitted beam; (3) focusing the sound beam apparently occurs in 
a series of stages that include contributions from the skull, nasal 
diverticula, melon a!
 nd connective tissue structures. An unexpected result is that adjustments to 
the focus and direction of the sound beam can result from small (millimetre 
scale) changes in the relative position of the anterior and posterior bursae 
within each sound generation complex. Comparing our results with those from 
dolphin psychoacoustic experiments establishes validation of our vibroacoustic 
model. The potential for varied effects from anthropogenic sound also 
emphasizes the importance of developing vibroacoustic modelling. These 
numerical modelling tools complement experimental data for determining exposure 
thresholds and may allow us to simulate exposure levels, from moderate to 
extreme, without impacting live animals.

Corresponding author: [email protected]

Best regards,

Vanessa Trijoulet
PhD student
Department of Mathematics and Statistics
University of Strathclyde
Livingstone Tower, 26 Richmond Street,
Glasgow,G1 1XH, Scotland
Tel: +44 (0)141 548 3385
http://www.strath.ac.uk/mathstat/staff/researchstudents/vanessatrijoulet/

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