This project discusses the harmful effects of human-generated noise pollution on frog populations, emphasizing anthropocentrism. Frog Chorus examines changes in the soundscape of frogs' environments and explores potential impacts on their population and individual health. Photographs of the wet spaces that frogs occupy on the city's edges are viewed through an abstract, blurry lens. Recorded frog sounds and human-generated noise into sound wave frequency maps to compare the frequency characteristics of frog calls with noise frequencies—which are presented in contrast to the soft blurriness of the frog habitats. When these images are overlapped together, the sonogram of the noise will completely cover the sonogram of the frog's croaking. According to literature research, the frequencies of human noise and frog croaking are highly similar; making the sonic difference between a frog’s chorus and human chatter—the lines between animal and human—become blurry and uncertain.