AI Being Tapped to Understand What Whales Say to Each Other - AI Trends
AI is being applied to whale research, especially to understand what whales are trying to communicate in the audible sounds they make to each other in the ocean. For example, marine biologist Shane Gero has worked to match clicks coming from whales around the Caribbean island nation of Dominica, to behavior he hopes will reveal the meanings of the sounds they make. Gero is a behavioral ecologist affiliated with the Marine Bioacoustics Lab at Aarhus University in Denmark, and the Department of Biology of Dalhousie University of Halifax, Nova Scotia. Gero works with a team from Project CETI, a nonprofit that aims to apply advanced machine learning and state-of-the-art robotics to listen to and translate the communication of whales. Project CETI has recently announced a five-year effort to build on Gero's work with a research project to try to decipher what sperm whales are saying to each other, according to a recent account in National Geographic.
Dec-16-2021, 04:50:33 GMT
- Country:
- Europe > Denmark (0.25)
- North America
- Canada
- British Columbia (0.05)
- Nova Scotia > Halifax Regional Municipality
- Halifax (0.25)
- Dominica (0.25)
- United States
- Alaska > Kenai Peninsula Borough
- Cook Inlet (0.07)
- New York (0.05)
- Alaska > Kenai Peninsula Borough
- Canada
- Pacific Ocean > North Pacific Ocean
- Cook Inlet (0.07)
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