Dolphin Translation Machine Coming Soon

Earnest Cavalli

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Jun 19, 2008
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Dolphin Translation Machine Coming Soon



It may lack the cachet of jamming a tiny fish in your ear, but a new machine in development by Florida researchers may let us converse with dolphins.

For nearly 15 years, Denise Herzing and her colleagues at the Florida-based Wild Dolphin Project have been attempting two-way communication with dolphins. While they've had success in teaching the animals to recognize commands (either in human language or using pictographic symbols), the biggest hurdle has always been in finding some way for the dolphins to respond.

Previously, the best Herzing could do was a system in which the dolphins point their bodies at various symbols to make requests. While this is a form of communication, it's ultimately no more revelatory than a mouse that has been conditioned to press a button every time it wants a food pellet.

Recently however, Herzing has joined forces with Thad Starner, an artificial intelligence researcher at the Georgia Institute of Technology, to build a system that would allow researchers and dolphins to "co-create" a language useful to both species.

While the idea is theoretically sound, it brings with it a number of technical hurdles. Most crucially, if the system is to allow dolphins to communicate with humans in a manner natural to the animal, the system must be able to recognize and translate the system of communication dolphins use in the wild.

Since dolphin vocalizations can reach the 200 KHz range -- far beyond the normal audible range of a human being -- and the animals are capable of omnidirectional "speech" without actually moving their heads, Starner and his group of students have created a special waterproof mini-computer capable of intercepting the full range of dolphin "speech."

The machine also includes a handheld Twiddler, a device that New Scientist describes as "a combination of mouse and keyboard," which will give researchers the ability to respond to their dolphin subjects with appropriate vocalizations of their own.

The idea here is that this machine would allow researchers to match dolphin "speech" with the appropriate responses, in essence learning to speak to the animals in much the same way we learn to communicate with other humans during our formative years.

Obviously this project is still in its nascent stages, but the concepts in practice all seem sound, and more crucially, the theoretical promise this idea holds is immense. The scientific potential of conversing with another species is unimaginable, and that's before you contemplate all the philosophical questions this entire thing would inherently raise. If nothing else, I have to assume dolphins would have some pretty scathing opinions on our modern oil drilling methods.

Source: New Scientist [http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21028115.400-talk-with-a-dolphin-via-underwater-translation-machine.html]

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English Stew

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First thing that comes to mind: if research in this field demonstrates that dolphins are sentient, will the Japanese dolphin meat industry be guilty of genocide? Almost certainly yes, I would think,though I imagine the laws on such things don't cover interspecies offences.
 

Cousin_IT

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Can dolphins pull the same face people do when someone who can't speak the language asks for directions?
 

Nocta-Aeterna

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The first interspecies communication between humans and dolphins will probably something like this

 

mireko

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The first thing they'll get is "BLOOD FOR THE BLOOD GOD! SKULLS FOR THE SKULL THRONE!"

[sub]Or maybe "BE SURE TO DRINK YOUR OVALTINE".[/sub]
 

similar.squirrel

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If dolphins turn out to be sapient, a lot of religious folk are going to freak out. Those are some pretty stark implications.
 

Bassman_2

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As I have said, this will be useful when we attach sonic weapons on them to carry out our plans in WWIII. The Allies, I mean.
 

StellarViking

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stupiddrummer said:
It's interesting research, but i fail to see the...Porpoise >_>
Dammit, you took the good pun.

It'd be interesting to see if this research holds any water. I hope it isn't a fluke.
 

Simskiller

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stupiddrummer said:
It's interesting research, but i fail to see the...Porpoise >_>
Something is... fishy with this post.

and Ninja'd by the rest of the thread with the So long and thanks for all the fish.
 

GonzoGamer

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JS ibanez said:
So long and thanks for all the fish?
Let's hope that's not the first thing that's translated. And if it is, DON'T PANIC.

I hear dolphins have an excellent sense of humor.
 

Braedan

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similar.squirrel said:
If dolphins turn out to be sapient, a lot of religious folk are going to freak out. Those are some pretty stark implications.
i'm sure they would find some way to warp their beliefs and say "oops, we interpreted the bible wrong again, tee hee".
 

Saucycarpdog

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Somebody better fund this research so that we can do this to other animals. I've always wanted to talk to a wolf.

I'm sure their culture would be cool to understand.