|
|
Line 18: |
Line 18: |
| | | |
| * [[Collective Animal Intelligence]] ... [[Animal Ecology]] ... [[Animal Language]] ... [[Bird Identification]] | | * [[Collective Animal Intelligence]] ... [[Animal Ecology]] ... [[Animal Language]] ... [[Bird Identification]] |
− | * [[Case Studies]]
| + | * [[Language Translation]] |
− | ** [[Language Translation]]
| |
| * [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human%E2%80%93animal_communication Human–animal communication Wikipedia] | | * [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human%E2%80%93animal_communication Human–animal communication Wikipedia] |
| * [https://www.nbcnews.com/mach/science/dogs-can-t-speak-human-here-s-tech-could-change-ncna836811 Dogs can't speak human. Here's the tech that could change that. A pet translator could be available in less than a decade. | Bahar Gholipour - MACH] | | * [https://www.nbcnews.com/mach/science/dogs-can-t-speak-human-here-s-tech-could-change-ncna836811 Dogs can't speak human. Here's the tech that could change that. A pet translator could be available in less than a decade. | Bahar Gholipour - MACH] |
Revision as of 19:06, 12 July 2023
Youtube search...
...Google search
With advances in machine learning, we now stand a chance to decode communication in non-human animal and plant life, which has fascinated humans for millennia. Cutting-edge technology can be used to benefit not only humankind, but other species on our planet, to better understand and protect the life around us. To make this possible, one needs to bring together and build on the latest discoveries of experts in disparate fields, including machine learning, signal processing, data science, linguistics, and acoustics. The goal of the workshop is to explore the challenges and current state-of-the-art in the study of non-human species communication as well as disciplines and technologies that are likely to provide solutions to these challenges. Decoding Communication in Nonhuman Species | Simons Institute
Decoding Communication in Nonhuman Species
With advances in machine learning, we now stand a chance to decode communication in non-human animal and plant life, which has fascinated humans for millennia. Cutting-edge technology can be used to benefit not only humankind, but other species on our planet, to better understand and protect the life around us. To make this possible, one needs to bring together and build on the latest discoveries of experts in disparate fields, including machine learning, signal processing, data science, linguistics, and acoustics. The goal of the workshop is to explore the challenges and current state-of-the-art in the study of non-human species communication as well as disciplines and technologies that are likely to provide solutions to these challenges.
|
|
|
How Close Are We to Talking With Animals?
We know about apes learning sign language, but what about dolphins typing on an underwater keyboard? Or A.I. machines translating prairie dog chirps? We want to answer how close we are to conversing with the animal kingdom.
|
|
What Information Do the Voices of African Savanna Elephants Communicate
Joyce Poole, ElephantVoices
|
|
|
Einstein the African Grey Parrot showed off her vocabulary skills with a 200 sounds and words
The African Grey Parrot from Zoo Knoxville in Tennessee showed off her impressive vocabulary skills with 200 Sounds and Words on her 30th birthday.
|
|
Animal Translators
Introducing Google Translate for Animals
Introducing Google Translate for Animals, a new application that can help you communicate with your pet.
|
|
|
Translating canine communication with computer science
Researchers at North Carolina State University are inventing technology to decode dog talk. Hari Sreenivasan visits a computer science lab that has designed a harness to monitor physiological and emotional changes and send wireless commands through vibrations, which could be used with guide animals or search and rescue dogs.
|
|
Apps That Can "Translate Animal Sounds"
Looking apps that can do things that phones literally can't do like translating cat meows into English, Xray scans and more. No hate to these apps they all say in the description that they can't actually do these things, other than the cat one. It’s a actually a good translate app other than that though
|
|
|
Woof! Dog translator gets upgrade
The Bowlingual, a gadget that analyzes a dog's bark to detect its emotion, is being relaunched. The gadget can supposedly recognize and convey 6 basic emotions from a dog's bark.
|
|
Translator - Saturday Night Live (SNL)
Three scientists (Scarlett Johansson, Kyle Mooney, Mikey Day) receive a shock when they debut their invention, a machine that translates for pets.
Translator - SNL
Three scientists (Scarlett Johansson, Kyle Mooney, Mikey Day) receive a shock when they debut their invention, a machine that translates for pets.
|
Dr. Dolittle
Doctor John Dolittle is the central character of a series of children's books by Hugh Lofting starting with the 1920 The Story of Doctor Dolittle. He is a physician who shuns human patients in favour of animals, with whom he can speak in their own languages. He later becomes a naturalist, using his abilities to speak with animals to better understand nature and the history of the world. Doctor Dolittle | Wikipedia
Doctor Dolittle (1967) ORIGINAL TRAILER
The original trailer of Doctor Dolittle directed by Richard Fleischer and starring Rex Harrison, Samantha Eggar, Anthony Newley and Richard Attenborough.
|
|
|
Dolittle - Official Trailer
He's just not a people person
|
|
Dr. Dolittle (1998)
Successful physician and devoted family man John Dolittle (Eddie Murphy) seems to have the world by the tail, until a long-suppressed talent he possessed as a child - the ability to communicate with animals - is suddenly reawakened with a vengeance! Now every creature within squawking distance wants the good doctor's advice, unleashing an outrageous chain of events that turn his world upside down!
|
|
|
Richard Dawkins - Science in the Soul
Richard Dawkins talked about his book Science in the Soul: Selected Writings of a Passionate Rationalist, in which he makes an argument for the “scientific way of thinking”.
|
|
|