This app allows you to practice identifying birds by ear using a set of recordings from Cornell Lab of Ornithology's Macauley Library.
The app requires purchasing a particular set of audio files from Cornell Lab of Ornithology's Macauley library. The set of recordings that the app works with is available as part of Bird Academy's course Bird Song Basics: Getting Started with Birding by Ear. The set consists of 1,375 recordings of North American species.
In the folder where the app is located, create a folder named "sounds". Copy all audio files that you want to use for practice to this folder. The app will then present recordings from this folder, selected at random for practice. (Note that you can copy a subset of a larger set of audio files to the folder to practice just that subset of recordings.)
The app creates a set of all recordings in the /sounds folder and plays a randomly selected recording from the set.
If you want to hear the recording again, click Repeat.
Once you think you know which species you are listening to, click Reveal bird to show a picture of the species.
Then, click Reveal name to reveal the species and additional information.
You evaluate your response by clicking on an emoji, and the app will track your percentage correct score.
(If you don't want to evaluate your current response, click Skip.)
If you indicate that your response is correct, the recording is removed from the set of recordings.
When no recordings are left, the app will repopulate the set of recordings and give you the option to reset your score.
Audio files purchased from the Macauley Library contain metadata, including a picture, common name, Latin name, place of recording, and recording artist.
The app pulls this information directly from the sound file and presents it on screen.
The app therefore only needs the soundfiles as input.
You can easily make custom quizzes (e.g. Spring migration warblers in your area) by only including a relevant subset of sound files in the sounds/ folder.
