Thanks to state-of-the-art “Dr. Doolittle devices could soon allow humans to talk to animals

dr Yossi Yovel and his team from Tel Aviv University, Israel, used ultrasonic frequency detectors to “translate” bats’ communicative sounds – and experts hope this can go further

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Thanks to the invention of multiple machines, we could soon be able to have two-way conversations with animals like Dr. Lead Dolittle.
Scientists have developed various technologies that AI can use to recognize what animals are saying, who they are communicating with, and in some cases even which creatures are speaking.
dr Yossi Yovel and his team from Tel Aviv University, Israel, used ultrasonic frequency detectors to “translate” bats’ communicative sounds.
He said the discovery was “like a miracle, like magic.”
He explained how bats emit mixed-frequency signals that reverberate off the environment, and while they’ve been known to eavesdrop on others, humans could do so using AI.
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Picture:
Fox)
dr Yovel said: “Machine learning can revolutionize our understanding of animal communication. “
dr Natalie Uomini, a cognitive scientist, is doing similar research on the New Caledonian crow.
She hopes that the AI she uses will soon be able to recognize which crow said what to whom.
She said, “Whatever the individual characteristics in the voice are, they probably resemble how people can differ from one another.”
Meanwhile, Linda Erb of the Dolphin Research Center in Florida has built a keyboard-like machine to talk to the mammals.
Her team was amazed when the dolphins began mimicking the signals, making the sound for “ball” their keyboard made when they encountered one, and even combining words to ask for things like a tummy rub.
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https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/people-could-soon-speak-animals-27106945 Thanks to state-of-the-art “Dr. Doolittle devices could soon allow humans to talk to animals