L
Lee A. Miller
Researcher at University of Southern Denmark
Publications - 71
Citations - 3703
Lee A. Miller is an academic researcher from University of Southern Denmark. The author has contributed to research in topics: Human echolocation & Phocoena. The author has an hindex of 36, co-authored 69 publications receiving 3458 citations. Previous affiliations of Lee A. Miller include University of Copenhagen & Harvard University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
How Some Insects Detect and Avoid Being Eaten by Bats: Tactics and Countertactics of Prey and Predator
Lee A. Miller,Annemarie Surlykke +1 more
TL;DR: The aim with this review is to present the complex interactions between echolocating bats and insects with bat-detecting ears and show how these interactions may be advantageous for predator or prey.
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Sperm whale clicks: Directionality and source level revisited
TL;DR: Previously published properties of sperm whale clicks underestimate the capabilities of the sound generator and therefore cannot falsify the Norris and Harvey theory.
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Ultra-High Foraging Rates of Harbor Porpoises Make Them Vulnerable to Anthropogenic Disturbance
Danuta M. Wisniewska,Mark Johnson,Jonas Teilmann,Laia Rojano-Doñate,Jeanne M. Shearer,Signe Sveegaard,Lee A. Miller,Ursula Siebert,Peter T. Madsen,Peter T. Madsen +9 more
TL;DR: It is reported that porpoises forage nearly continuously day and night, attempting to capture up to 550 small fish prey per hour with a remarkable prey capture success rate of >90%, which means that they must forage almost continually to meet their metabolic demands with such small prey, leaving little margin for compensation.
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The echolocation and hunting behavior of the bat,Pipistrellus kuhli
TL;DR: The echolocation and hunting behavior of Pipistrellus kuhli was studied in the field using multi-exposure photography synchronized with high-speed tape recordings to argue that the minimum detection distance can be estimated from the pulse duration as the distance where pulse-echo overlap is avoided.
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Echolocation by two foraging harbour porpoises (Phocoena phocoena)
TL;DR: The lag time in the search and the initial part of the approach phase seems to be long enough for the porpoise to process echo information before emitting the next click (pulse mode), however, it is assumed that during the buzz lag times are too short for pulse mode processing.