Les cétacés et les intelligences artificielles: un échange envisageable?



Il y a actuellement une étude en cours sur les grands cachalots, les plus importants chasseurs à dents de la planète, dans le but de comprendre leur langage sophistiqué et éventuellement de dialoguer avec eux. Les cachalots utilisent des suites spécifiques de claquements appelées codas pour échanger, et grâce aux technologies d’intelligence artificielle, les spécialistes ambitionnent de décoder ces codas afin de les traduire en termes et en expressions intelligibles. Cette initiative s’appuie sur des années de travaux de recherche et sur la collecte de données massives à partir de dispositifs autonomes et de drones sous-marins pour enregistrer les vocalises des cétacés. Si cette transposition se concrétise, cela pourrait non seulement favoriser notre appréhension des cachalots, mais également contribuer à leur préservation face aux dangers comme le réchauffement climatique et la contamination liée aux activités humaines.
Source : Science Authentique | Date : 2023-03-18 16:19:43 | Durée : 00:20:52

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Commentaires

@realscience

To really understand the structure and evolution of whale language, we first need to understand our own. The evolutionary past of human language is not straightforward. But understanding it's origins might give us more hints about how language is used by our ocean friends.
Watch our episode on the origins of human language on Nebula
https://nebula.tv/videos/realscience-how-humans-started-speaking/

@steverico3090

They should just trt Whalestep. Its like Dubstep, but with whales.

@spatrk6634

if you build it, they will come

@shreenathvyas

When you want to focus your viewer to the sound, why add unnecessary and annoying background music? Literally at the start you say “this is the sound of whale…” while blasting generic background music simultaneously. Please don’t do that, been watching your whale and shark video, all talk about the sounds they make while overlapping their sounds from this generic music. thanks.🙏

@jopar4869

Trying to explain to the whales how we did this is gonna be hard

@zzp1

I absolutely believe so. If you can decipher their wavelength one might be capable to construct a communication channel. And therefore, I fully agree with you.

@jettisoncargo

Maybe next they can use AI to understand Welsh.

@seasirena2787

Once again electricity and its true nature is swept under the rug. AI will not be able to sentient with like minded ancient whale. Fin.

@spencerdunn2313

Just you wait. Soon we'll have the translater collars from adventure time. They'll use ai to convert to english, and then active noise cancelling to eliminate the original sounds and play the translation

@spencerdunn2313

Just you wait. Soon we'll have the translater collars from adventure time. They'll use ai to convert to english, and then active noise cancelling to eliminate the original sounds and play the translation

@TheRealLarissa

Why does every narrator in these videos sound like a child? Super annoying.

@andrewcrane5105

"You humans remind me of the ancient mole people"

First interpreted whale conversation

@ansonang7810

Animal language can change as they have no school or written knowledge.

@valentinkogler3942

just a wild guess but: it probably could given enough time and samples, but it would still not know what it was saying nor be able to translate it for humans.
Chat GPT has no Idea what you are talking about, it just knows that the most fitting respons pattern to a nummerical value generated from your text is this or that. Maybe even that it has to report certain things but it still does not know what's the meaning behind.

@zsazsathehungarian950

Yup, lets hear what Moby Dick was really saying to Captain Ahab. Should be interesting. Thanks H.M.

@6thface

AI has is not conscious. AI can probably talk to whales, however that does not mean the AI will know what it is saying or be able to translate….

@Destiny975_Hollow-Finkelhuben

the backroundmusic is so distracting 🙁 you cant even hear the clicks accurately.. if i didn't know the sound i had not recognized them…

@SPYK3O

It's interesting they're studying the language of Sperm whales, which are notoriously difficult to study, instead of like dolphins.

@shahalpha1739

Well if we could talk to them one day, maybe the first thing to do is telling we are sorry for any disturbance we do to the ocean.

@flashhtony2948

Watching this video makes me really wonder how there can be people not believing in God, after seeing all this beauty and complexity.

@ehecken

Just because it's above and beyond our ability to understand doesn't mean it's not language it just means they are more advanced than we are.

@jeffbucksnort

You have to learn their conversation and words first before you can translate to our language to talk to them. Back up on the math and take it a problem back before you translate to English to translate to them and translate back to English

@velvetvideo

they need to add more parameters like music and math to the translation algorithm….not just words or letters and grammar

@pcka12

It is interesting that Chat gpt requires such a vast data set to begin to compete with what a 6 year old achieves!

There are humans that use so called 'click languages'.

@johnsmith1953x

And that's how Star Trek IV scenerio happens….

@user-nt5wt8tr7n

she said 'the first interspecies communication'. not true. koko the gorilla beat you to it, dear.

@imikewillrockyou

They're saying, "hey I'm over here" and "I found a school of yummy fish" and "back off, that's my female"

@tolkienfan1972

I came very skeptical, given the title. But having skimmed the transcript I'm pleasantly surprised. The existing work suggests that the reason children can acquire language so quickly is because much of the structure common to all languages, or maybe a superset, is actually physically encoded. Not specifics like beach ball, or mother, but maybe things to do with grammar and structure of language. Maybe even things like association and family structure. Might explain things like gendered objects in many languages. If we can extract something akin to that from our LLMs we could use them to train models with far smaller training sets. I know work along those lines has already been successful, but this suggests you can be much more targetted and more efficient. You might be able to compress this foundational model. Possibly manyfold speeding up training for special purposes and making for lightweight models.

@test-bt5zz

Hopefuly human resurch dont harm those magnificent creatures

@sigspearthumb3249

Whale song translated: "Where the white women at"?

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