PHOTO: Joshua Dalsimer
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CALL WAITING: Dale Joachim tracks owls using cellular
technology.
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Just after sundown on Halloween night, a hardy,
fleece-clad group of brave souls led by electrical
engineer ventures forth into the pitch-dark
woods of central Connecticut. To the uninitiated, the
setting brings to mind scenes from any number of horror
films, along with the fleeting thought that no rational
person would have picked such a night to stray so far
from the beaten track. But Joachim is completely focused
on the task at hand: placing a call to any nearby
screech owls from his cellphone and seeing whether they
will answer.
No, he’s not crazy. Joachim is out to prove that
cellular telephones can be used to remotely monitor and
communicate with birds and other animals. When he and
his group finally reach their woodland destination, at
the edge of a dirt road between two stands of trees,
they quickly set up several tripods, some with
cellphones attached to loudspeakers, others with
cellphones attached to receivers and recording
equipment. Joachim then takes out a handset not much
different from the one you’d use to call a friend or
client, and he dials into a Web site housed on a server
in his Cambridge, Mass., office. The site lets Joachim
plan the evening’s investigation: which of the dozen
cellphones with loudspeakers will emit the series of
whistles and chirps that faithfully replicate the birds’
calls, how long the digital bird calls will last, and
when the receivers, which will listen for any responding
bird calls, will switch on.
The technology isn’t limited to screech owls, Joachim
explains as the group waits. He simply started the
experiment with them “because they are nocturnal, and at
night, cellular calling time is free.” He believes his
innovation will help researchers and conservationists
track and keep a fairly accurate count of animals—and
without repeatedly disturbing their habitats. “If my
equipment were already set up [in the field], I could
have done this from my office in Cambridge, or really
anywhere in the world,” says Joachim.
At present, the old way to track birds is still the
best way—sending a trained person to the critters’
habitat to actually count them. Joachim says his
technology will make the process cheaper and less
taxing, because conservationists won’t need to make as
many trips to remote areas or stay as long. In fact, the
state of Maine plans to deploy some of Joachim’s
networks on a trial basis next spring when it conducts
its annual owl count.
What’s more, Joachim says, “the animals become sensors
in a sense, telling us things about the world around us
that we would not otherwise notice.” For example, he
says, anecdotes have surfaced that some species of birds
left southern Louisiana and Mississippi in August 2005,
perhaps because they sensed the devastation that was
about to be visited upon the area by Hurricane Katrina.
A system that can remotely monitor animals in their
habitats could help confirm or refute such stories.
360 to 950 HZ
frequency range of an Eastern screech owl
Joachim himself could have used such a heads-up. When
Katrina struck, he was an assistant professor of
electrical engineering at Tulane University, in New
Orleans, teaching computer architecture, digital logic,
and speech processing. In the aftermath of the storm, he
and his graduate students scattered to schools across
the United States, and the bulk of their work on the
bird-monitoring project was destroyed. Joachim, who last
March landed a two-year appointment at the MIT Media Lab
as a Martin Luther King, Jr. Visiting Professor, has
since regenerated the lost data, and he is now
philosophical about the turn of events. “I look back on
Katrina as an opportunity,” he says. “How often in life
do you come to a point where you can ask yourself ‘What
would I really like to do?’ and have the ability to dive
right into it?”
It stands to reason that although Joachim was
uprooted, he wasn’t toppled. The son of teachers who
shared a passion for educating the less fortunate, he
spent his childhood zigzagging across North America,
Africa, and Europe—wherever his parents’ calling took
the family. One result is that the Brooklyn, N.Y.–born
Joachim is fluent in English, French, and Spanish.
Formative years spent in remote villages also touched
off his enduring interest in wildlife. “There were
always lots of animals around,” he recalls. “At first,
like most little boys, I was drawn by the instinct to
hunt them. But as I got older, I started taking care of
them.” Many of the animals were injured raptors, such as
owls, hawks, and eagles, which he would care for and
feed; when they were well enough, the birds would simply
fly away.
The bird-monitoring project allows him to combine his
love of nature with his curiosity about how things work.
“Technology is not an end in itself, but a set of tools
to be used for getting a better understanding of the
world and helping to improve it,” he says.
Joachim sees his career path as part of a natural
progression. “My father was often the headmaster at
these schools, so we had access to labs.” By the time he
was 12, he was building motors from discarded electric
devices that he had taken apart. His parents’ support
for his tinkering—buying him books on electronics and
often turning a blind eye to his handiwork—was a real
boost, he says. One day, he decided to convert a
pedal-powered toy car into a helicopter: “My parents
bought all the stuff I asked for, although I had only a
dim concept of aerodynamics.” That became clear when
heavy rains destroyed the helicopter’s papier-mâché
fuselage. “Still, it was an earnest effort,” Joachim
says. And he still wanted to be an engineer, eventually
earning a master’s degree and a Ph.D. in electrical and
computer engineering from Michigan State University, in
East Lansing.
At MIT, he’s been combining his technical acumen with
another of his longtime loves: music. Joachim, an
accomplished keyboardist who got involved in New
Orleans’s vibrant jazz scene, is using
signal‑processing techniques derived from
speech-recognition algorithms to model, analyze, and
eventually automatically label jazz chords. These chords
are known for being ambiguous, in order to allow for the
improvisation that is one of jazz’s defining elements.
But Joachim is confident that by applying a contextual
understanding of what a musician is playing to
signal-processing techniques, he can get computers to
correctly identify the chords.
Back in the Connecticut woods, a steady conversation
soon gets under way between Joachim’s chirping
cellphones and a couple of nearby screech owls. The
back-and-forth continues until another bird’s call
causes one of the screech owls to clam up and take
flight. The distinctive cry, which consists of a rapid
series of low-pitched hoots that could almost be
mistaken for an aggressive barking dog, is that of a
great horned owl, Joachim explains. It’s a predator
twice the screech owl’s size—and a good reason for the
smaller bird to maintain radio silence.