Ed Baker FLS ARCS

Picture of Ed Baker.

I am an interdisciplinary researcher investigating how technology can be used to monitor biodiversity, in particular using bioacoustic and ecoacoustic approaches.

GitHub | CV | Media | Social

Latest publications

Bioacoustic and Ecoacoustic Data in Audiovisual Core

Good practice guidelines for long-term ecoacoustic monitoring in the UK

Google Scholar

Talks

03/03/2025 - Impacts of Urban Noise

22/01/2025 - TDWG Kingston Biodiversity Network

05/12/2024 - NHM x Natural England

08/11/2024 - Digital Dimensions of Nature Recovery

05/10/2024 - BNA Encaenia

All talks

Notes

Prophalangopsis obscura

Linux audio recipes

Acoustics figures

SANE defaults

All notes

Some thoughts on:

Sensor network philosophy

Don’t innovate the basics

We have established solutions for many problems, these solutions come with existing experience and communities. We should not innovate for the sake of innovation.

Commodity hardware

Bespoke hardware is expensive and difficult to maintain. Commodity Linux hardware such as Raspberry Pi is cheap, can be supported by existing IT teams, and has a large community of users. There is a clear replacement and upgrade path.

Existing software solutions

Automate maintenence

Build for the future

Over-capacity

Installing an underground wired network is a once-only opportunity. We should install more capacity than we need now, so that we can expand the network in the future. This includes over-specifying the digital network capacity, and preparing the grounds for the installation of more sensors.

Easy to maintain

Expandable