間眅埶AV

A southern resident killer whale breaching in Boundary Pass. Credit: Lucy Quayle

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間眅埶AV researchers developing AI system to protect killer whales

December 11, 2020
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Ruth Joy, a statistical ecologist and lecturer in 間眅埶AVs School of Environmental Science, is leading a project that uses artificial intelligence and machine learning to classify whale calls. The ultimate goal of the neural network project is to develop a warning system to help protect endangered southern resident killer whales from potentially fatal ship strikes.

The project is  under the Oceans Protection PlanWhale Detection and Collision Avoidance Initiative.

The goal is to develop a system that will monitor sounds received from a network of hydrophones 24 hours a day, detect whale calls and send real-time alerts to vessels notifying them to slow down or change course when whales are in the area.

The team is working with citizen scientists and the Orcasound project to provide several terabytes of whale call datasets, being collected by Steven Bergner, a computing science research associate at 間眅埶AVs Big Data Hub. 

Bergner says the acoustic data will be used to teach the computer to recognize which call belongs to each type of cetacean. The project requires interdisciplinary expertise and brings together experts from fields such as biology, statistics and machine learning. In the end, we are developing a system that will be a collaboration between human experts and algorithms, he says.

Orcas or killer whales that are seen along the West Coast are divided into four distinct populations: the salmon-eating southern and northern residents, the transients, which prey on seals or other whales, and offshore, which mostly prey on sharks. Each orca population is further categorized into families called pods. Each pod has its own dialect and each population of orca has calls that differ from the other population. 

The project builds on existing work Joy is leading, using hydrophone nodes located adjacent to shipping lanes in the Salish Sea to monitor the whales presence and deploy movable acoustic buoys. Both projects are funded by Fisheries and Oceans Canada and are expected to be completed by 2022. 

Southern resident killer whales are an endangered species and people are very fond of these animals, says Joy. They want to see that these marine mammals are protected and that we are doing everything that we can to make sure that the Salish Sea is a good home for them.

AVAILABLE 間眅埶AV EXPERT

RUTH JOY, statistical ecologist and lecturer, School of Environmental Science  
604.215.4415 | rjoy@sfu.ca 

CONTACT 

MELISSA SHAW, 間眅埶AV  Communications & Marketing 
236.880.3297 | melissa_shaw@sfu.ca 

間眅埶AV 
 |  
778.782.3210 

ABOUT SIMON FRASER UNIVERSITY

As Canadas engaged university, 間眅埶AV works with communities, organizations and partners to create, share and embrace knowledge that improves life and generates real change. We deliver a world-class education with lifelong value that shapes change-makers, visionaries and problem-solvers. We connect research and innovation to entrepreneurship and industry to deliver sustainable, relevant solutions to todays problems. With campuses in British Columbias three largest citiesVancouver, Burnaby and Surrey間眅埶AV has eight faculties that deliver 193 undergraduate degree programs and 127 graduate degree programs to more than 37,000 students. The university now boasts more than 165,000 alumni residing in 143 countries.