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About the Authors
Timothy K. Stanton
tstanton@whoi.edu
Department of Applied Ocean Physics and Engineering
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution MS#11
Woods Hole, Massachusetts 02543, USA
Timothy K. Stanton is a scientist emeritus at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (Woods Hole, MA). He has spent his entire career in the area of underwater sound, with a focus on developing models of acoustic scattering by realistic objects. An important element of his research has involved relating the physics of the scattering to parameters of the statistics of echoes. In addition to modeling, he has developed advanced acoustic instruments with which he has made measurements at sea to study marine life.
Wu-Jung Lee
leewujung@gmail.com
Applied Physics Laboratory University of Washington
1013 Northeast 40th Street Seattle, Washington 98105, USA
Wu-Jung Lee is a senior oceanogra- pher in the Applied Physics Laboratory of the University of Washington (Seattle). Her work is divided between acousti- cal oceanography, where she develops acoustic methods as a remote sensing tool in the ocean, and bioacoustics, where she studies sensorimotor feedback mechanisms in echolocating
animals (bats and dolphins). These areas intersect in the scat- tering physics of swimming (ocean) and flying (air) organisms as well as in data-driven methodology for information extrac- tion, which are major focuses of her research.
Kyungmin Baik kbaik@kriss.re.kr
Acoustics, Ultrasound, and Vibration Metrology Group
Division of Physical Metrology
Korea Research Institute of Standards and Science
Daejeon 34113, Republic of Korea
Kyungmin Baik is a principal research scientist in the Acous- tics, Ultrasound, and Vibration Metrology Group, Division of Physical Metrology of the Korea Research Institute of Standards and Science (Daejeon, Republic of Korea). After conducting research in nuclear physics at the beginning of his career, his research has principally been in the area of under- water sound in which he develops models of scattering by various types of objects and propagation of sound through a bubbly liquid. He has also developed analytical models of the statistics of random echoes.
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Reflections
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Summer 2021 • Acoustics Today 69