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The sperm whale 'phonetic alphabet' revealed by AI

bbc.com
submitted
10 mos ago
byiareuniquetoscience

Summary

Sperm whales communicate with each other using rhythmic sequences of clicks, called codas. Sperm whales live in multi-level, matrilineal societies – groups of daughters, mothers and grandmothers. The males roam the oceans, visiting the groups to breed.

Sperm whale vocalisations could carry a much richer amount of information than previously thought. Each coda consists of between three and 40 rapid-fire clicks. The existence of a combinatorial coding system is a prerequisite for "duality of patterning" – a linguistic phenomenon thought to be unique to human language.

Young says we're still a long way off from understanding what sperm whales might be saying to each other. But the better we can understand these amazing animals, the more we'll know about how we can protect them. "We really have no idea," says Young.

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5 Comments

3
theonesource
10 mos ago
That's really cool that we might be able to start translating their calls!
2
splitsecond
10 mos ago
I hope the one researcher is wrong and it's actually closer than we think
2
theonesource
10 mos ago
That would be cool to see! It'd be nice to get some of this pushing forward faster
3
eldiscipulo
10 mos ago
This is what I want to be seeing! Give us patterns that a regular human isn't connecting the dots on!
2
iareuniqueOP
10 mos ago
I think this is what everybody would love to see