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Sperm whale communication secrets decoded by MIT scientists
Interesting Engineering· 3 hours agoThe researchers discovered that sperm whales have their own version of an alphabet for...
Scientists are learning the basic building blocks of sperm whale language after years of effort |...
Texarkana Gazette· 1 day agoScientists studying the sperm whales that live around the Caribbean island of Dominica have...
Sperm whales communicate through a 'complex phonetic alphabet,' study finds
ABC News via Yahoo News· 15 hours agoThe ways sperm whales communicate with each other may be more "complex" than scientists previously...
Scientists document remarkable sperm whale 'phonetic alphabet'
NBC NEWS· 20 hours agoThe various species of whales inhabiting Earth’s oceans employ different types of vocalizations to...
Sperm whale speech — with ‘alphabet’ — is decoded. What other animals can AI translate?
Miami Herald via Yahoo News· 16 hours agoWith the help of artificial intelligence, the research team from the Massachusetts Institute of...
Scientists Discover a 'Phonetic Alphabet' Used by Sperm Whales, Moving One Step Closer to Decoding...
Smithsonian Magazine· 19 hours agoNow, with help from artificial intelligence, scientists are starting to unravel some of the...
Sperm Whale Communication Is Remarkably Similar to Human Language, Research Suggests
Gizmodo via Yahoo News· 2 days agoSperm whales’ clicking communiques include context and combination structures that make their...
ML analysis of whale song shows similarities to human speech
The Register· 5 hours agoThe study, published this week in Nature and titled "Contextual and combinatorial structure in sperm...
Sperm whale ‘alphabet’ discovered, thanks to machine learning
TechCrunch· 2 days agoResearchers at MIT CSAIL and Project CETI believe that they have unlocked a kind of sperm whale...
Sperm whales may have their own 'alphabet'
Popular Science via Yahoo News· 2 days ago“Sperm whale calls are, in principle, capable of expressing a wider space of meanings than we previously thought!” MIT computer science graduate student...