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Google works to decode the communication of dolphins using AI

Cracking Dolphin code.

Dolphins are one of the smartest animals on Earth and have been revered for thousands of years for their intelligence, emotions and social interaction with humans.

Google now uses artificial intelligence (AI) to try to understand how they communicate with each other, hoping that someday humans could use technology to chat with the kind mammals aligned.

Google has joined with researchers from the Georgia Institute of Technology and the Wild Dolphin (WDP) project, one with a non -profit Florida that has been studying and records dolphin sounds for 40 years, to build the new Ai model called DolphingeMma.

Google is using artificial intelligence (AI) to try to understand how dolphins communicate with each other, hoping that someday humans could use technology to chat with them. (Istock)

“Super Pod” of more than 1,500 dolphins from the California coast captured in Drone video

For decades, WDP has type of sound sound with behavioral contexts. For example, signature whistles have been used by mothers and calves to gather, while dust “searches” often explode during dolphin fights, according to researchers, according to a Google blog of the project.

Click “Buzzes” are often used during courtship or chasing sharks.

Now, using the vast data collected by WDP, Google has created DolphingeMma, based on the Open Ai Open Model of Google, known as Gemma.

Dolphingemma has been formed to analyze the vast recordings library to detect patterns, structures and even possible “meanings” behind the communications or vocalizations of the dolphins.

Over time, Dolphingemma will try to organize the sounds of the dolphin in categories, almost like words, phrases or expressions in human language.

Google Gemma

Google has joined with researchers from the Georgia Institute of Technology and the Wild Dolphin (WDP) project, one with a non -profit Florida that has been studying and records dolphin sounds for 40 years, to build the new Ai model called DolphingeMma.

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“By identifying recurrent sound patterns, clusters and reliable sequences, the model can help researchers discover hidden structures and potential meanings within the natural communication of dolphins, a task that requires immense human effort before,” a Google post is called on the project.

“Finally, these patterns, increased by synthetic sounds created by researchers to refer to objects with whom dolphins want to play, can establish a vocabulary shared with dolphins for interactive communication.”

Dolphingemma uses the technology of the Google pixel telephone, specifically the audio recording technology used on pixel devices, to make clean and high quality recordings of dolphin vocalizations.

The technology of the pixel telephone can separate the clicks and whistles of dolphins from the background noise such as waves, boat engines or underwater static. This clean audio is essential for ai models like Dolphinemma, because the disorderly and noisy data confused the AI, according to researchers.

A ZOOOKEPER carrying a protective mask looks inside a dolphin.

A ZOOKEPER that has a protective mask looks inside the mouth of a dolphin in the “ Planete Sauvage ” Zoo in Saint-Pere-in-re-rein, outside Nantes, on May 6, 2020. Dolphins are one of the smartest animals on Earth and have been revered for thousands of years for their intelligence, emotions and social interaction with humans. (Loic Venance/AFP through Getty Images)

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Google says it plans to launch DolphingeMma as an open model this summer, allowing researchers around the world to use it and adapt it.

Although it is composed of dolphins stained by the Atlantic, the model could also help study other species such as bottle or spinner dolphins with a little adjustment, according to researchers.

“Providing tools like Dolphingemma, we hope to give researchers worldwide tools to undermine their own acoustic data sets, accelerate the search for patterns and collectively deepen our understanding of these smart marine mammals,” says the publication of the blog.

#Google #works #decode #communication #dolphins
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