Dolphin Language Translated. Human to Dolphin coming soon

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bluecoconuts

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Dolphin whistle instantly translated by computer
Software has performed the first real-time translation of a dolphin whistle – and better data tools are giving fresh insights into primate communication too

IT was late August 2013 and Denise Herzing was swimming in the Caribbean. The dolphin pod she had been tracking for the past 25 years was playing around her boat. Suddenly, she heard one of them say, "Sargassum".

"I was like whoa! We have a match. I was stunned," says Herzing, who is the director of the Wild Dolphin Project. She was wearing a prototype dolphin translator called Cetacean Hearing and Telemetry (CHAT) and it had justtranslated a live dolphin whistle for the first time.

It detected a whistle for sargassum, or seaweed, which she and her team had invented to use when playing with the dolphin pod. They hoped the dolphins would adopt the whistles, which are easy to distinguish from their own natural whistles – and they were not disappointed. When the computer picked up the sargassum whistle, Herzing heard her own recorded voice saying the word into her ear.

As well as boosting our understanding of animal behaviour, the moment hints at the potential for using algorithms to analyse any activity where information is transmitted – including our daily activities (see "Scripts for life").

"It sounds like a fabulous observation, one you almost have to resist speculating on. It's provocative," says Michael Coen, a biostatistician at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

Herzing is quick to acknowledge potential problems with the sargassum whistle. It is just one instance and so far hasn't been repeated. Its audio profile looks different from the whistle they taught the dolphins – it has the same shape but came in at a higher frequency. Brenda McCowan of the University of California, Davis, says her experience with dolphin vocalisations matches that observation.

Thad Starner at the Georgia Institute of Technology and technical lead on the wearable computer Google Glass, built CHAT for Herzing with a team of graduate students. Starner and Herzing are using pattern-discovery algorithms, designed to analyse dolphin whistles and extract meaningful features that a person might miss or not think to look for. As well as listening out for invented whistles, the team hopes to start trying to figure out what the dolphins' natural communication means, too.

McCowan says it's an exciting time for the whole field of animal communication. With better information-processing tools, researchers can analyse huge data sets of animal behaviour for patterns.

Coen is already doing something like this with white-cheeked gibbons. Using similar machine-learning techniques to those used by Starner and McCowan, he has found 27 different fundamental units in gibbon calls.

McCowan, meanwhile, has recently modelled the behaviour of rhesus macaques at the National Primate Research Center in California. The idea is to predict when the macaques would descend into the violent social unrest known as "cage war" that often leads to the death of the alpha family.

Her team started collecting data, making 37,000 observations of key signs of dominance, subordination and affiliation over three years. Among other things, their analysis showed that cage stability improved if new young adult males were introduced now and again as they seemed to grow into "policing" roles. "You had to look at the data," McCowan says. "It wasn't something a human could see."

Terrence Deacon, an anthropologist and neuroscientist at the University of California, Berkeley, explains that some pattern of repetition is a basic requirement when information is transmitted. In other words, if Herzing's dolphins or McCowan's macaques are exchanging information, if their behaviour is not just random, meaningless noise, then there must be some discoverable patterns. Information theory can find out what those pattern are, which parts of a whistle are important, helping behaviourists figure out what animals are communicating.

The first results from Starner and Herzing's work on dolphin communication-processing are due to be presented at the speech and signal processing conference in Florence, Italy, in May. Last summer's work was cut short because the team lost the dolphin pod, but they did make some progress. Starner's algorithms discovered eight different components in a sample of 73 whistles. It's still preliminary, but they were able to match certain strings of those components with mother-calf interactions, for instance. The work has let them plan for the coming summer when they want to confirm two-way communication between humans and dolphins.

Deacon is excited to see if such work can lead to a better understanding of animal cultures. He suspects much animal communication will turn out to be basic pointing or signposting rather than more complex language. But humans often communicate on a basic level too. "I don't see a fundamental white line that distinguishes us from other animals," he says.



http://www.newscientist.com/article...ntly-translated-by-computer.html#.Uzc29vlwQrV





Pretty exciting news really. To be able to talk with another species, especially one that is rather intelligent. It's already been discovered that Dolphins are self aware, call each other by name, and pass information on verbally. What's even cooler is that we can use methods like this to be able to decipher alien languages should contact ever be made.
 

Selassie I

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Here's a couple of vids of some dolphins playing with our boat. They have higher intelligence. No question in my mind.




 

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Lol I already did this like 5 years ago. You just have to be really high.
 

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Here's a couple of vids of some dolphins playing with our boat. They have higher intelligence. No question in my mind.





In this first video, the dolphins are swimming at the bow of the boat in the same direction as the boat, YES?
 

Selassie I

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The ocean looks like glass.. damn I miss living on the water


That 1st video was taken by a Go Pro on the eastern side of the Bahamas. Very deep water.

The 2nd was taken with a phone and we're only about 10 miles off shore of Daytona Beach.
 

Selassie I

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In this first video, the dolphins are swimming at the bow of the boat in the same direction as the boat, YES?


Yes. My boat has a cat hull. Dolphin can actually surf directly in between the 2 hulls right in the middle. We've reached down and touched their backs a couple different times when they do that and come up for a blast of air.

We were headed out for some yellow fin tuna in that one... and the dolphin were too,,, they feed on the schools of fish the tuna chase up from the deep water.
 

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Yes. My boat has a cat hull. Dolphin can actually surf directly in between the 2 hulls right in the middle. We've reached down and touched their backs a couple different times when they do that and come up for a blast of air.

We were headed out for some yellow fin tuna in that one... and the dolphin were too,,, they feed on the schools of fish the tuna chase up from the deep water.
About 45-degrees off the bow of each hull is where the greatest pressure gradients are, so my guess is they swim in that area. Its sort of like getting a free ride, or swimming down a water slide for them. And inbetween the two hulls, where the gradients meet, it must have an almost double-boost effect.
 

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There's been plenty of research done over the years to suggest that dolphins ride bow waves to save energy. It may be a thrill to them but it is almost certainly a benefit in terms of efficiency.
 

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There's been plenty of research done over the years to suggest that dolphins ride bow waves to save energy. It may be a thrill to them but it is almost certainly a benefit in terms of efficiency.
There are 3 areas where they can get a boost: almost direct in front of the bow, 45-degrees behind the bow, and 45-degrees behind the stern - all of these are areas where pressure is reduced, and therefore they get pulled along.. In a conventional hull the area in front of the bow is is the best.
 

Flipper_336

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Interesting stuff.

Many people believe that dolphins just ride along next to boats because they like being close to mankind; I think that there's more to it than that rather simplistic view.
 

Selassie I

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I'll tell you something that is really cool that we've seen from a few Dolphins who are kept in captivity at a resort on Duck Key. They're kept in some big pins that are built into a canal behind the resort. They are like big cages in the actual ocean (canal) and we take our boat directly by the cages on our way through. We are only a few feet away from them and with the clear water in the Keys you can see them perfectly. We always stop and watch them along the way, and my wife usually tries everything to get their attention. The dolphins totally ignore her and anything we humans try ... and my wife especially, really really tries.

Anyway, when we have our dog on the boat, everything changes with the dolphins' behavior. Our schnauzer loves to eat live fish... When he sees these big "fish" swimming right next to us , he goes ape shit with a screeching series of barks. The dolphins find this very very fascinating. They pop their heads out of the water and will stay there for as long as our dog will continue to bark. They scream right back at our dog with a bunch of loud dolphin noises. It's hilarious. The dolphins absolutely enjoy every minute of it... you can tell that the wheels are really turning in their heads when this happens. We bring our dog by there now just for the dolphins entertainment... it's really neat.

Their eyes let you know how intelligent they are. Beautiful creatures.
 

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I'll tell you something that is really cool that we've seen from a few Dolphins who are kept in captivity at a resort on Duck Key. They're kept in some big pins that are built into a canal behind the resort. They are like big cages in the actual ocean (canal) and we take our boat directly by the cages on our way through. We are only a few feet away from them and with the clear water in the Keys you can see them perfectly. We always stop and watch them along the way, and my wife usually tries everything to get their attention. The dolphins totally ignore her and anything we humans try ... and my wife especially, really really tries.

Anyway, when we have our dog on the boat, everything changes with the dolphins' behavior. Our schnauzer loves to eat live fish... When he sees these big "fish" swimming right next to us , he goes ape crap with a screeching series of barks. The dolphins find this very very fascinating. They pop their heads out of the water and will stay there for as long as our dog will continue to bark. They scream right back at our dog with a bunch of loud dolphin noises. It's hilarious. The dolphins absolutely enjoy every minute of it... you can tell that the wheels are really turning in their heads when this happens. We bring our dog by there now just for the dolphins entertainment... it's really neat.

Their eyes let you know how intelligent they are. Beautiful creatures.


wifey and I have been on numerous dolphin and manatee watching boats tours in SWF and almost every one of them had a dog on board that would bark when the dolphins were in sight of the boat, and the dolphins responded by coming closer to the boat and interacting with us.

The manatees pretty much just lay there and do nothing LOL
 

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wifey and I have been on numerous dolphin and manatee watching boats tours in SWF and almost every one of them had a dog on board that would bark when the dolphins were in sight of the boat, and the dolphins responded by coming closer to the boat and interacting with us.

The manatees pretty much just lay there and do nothing LOL


Hahaha. Manatees are no geniuses, that's for sure. They are attracted to fresh water running out of a hose into the saltwater. I think that purposely attracting them like that is frowned on,,, may even be against the law.

We do it anyway. Manatees will swim up and roll over and float on their backs and drink the water from the hose. They'll even hold the hose with their front flippers. They look like giant babies holding a bottle. They can drink a bunch.

I had one come up on me one time when I was diving. The visibility was poor that day. The manatee and I noticed each other at the exact same time. We scared the shit out of each other too. We were only a few feet away from each other when we came into each of our views. We both froze for a few seconds in shock. Full grown manatees are huge. He shot off very fast once he snapped out of his shock. They can actually swim fast. LOL... We scared the shit out of each other.