So long and thanks for all the fish? A Swedish company hopes to decipher what dolphins are really saying.
AP file photo
UPDATED: 9:15 PM, APRIL 26, 2017
STOCKHOLM — After mastering 40 human languages, a Swedish startup is hoping to use its language-analysis software to unlock the secrets of communication employed by dolphins.
Using technology from artificial intelligence language-analysis company Gavagai, researchers from Sweden’s KTH Royal Institute of Technology will begin compiling a dolphin-language dictionary. The software will monitor captive bottlenose dolphins at a wildlife park about 90 miles (144km) south of Stockholm, the company said in an emailed statement on Wednesday (April 26).
“We hope to be able to understand dolphins with the help of artificial intelligence technology,” Professor Jussi Karlgren, an adjunct professor of language technology at KTH and co-founder of Gavagai, said in the statement.
“We know that dolphins have a complex communication system, but we don’t know what they are talking about yet.”
Tech giants such as Amazon.com and Alphabet are using AI andmachine learning — essentially getting computers to act without being programmed for specific new tasks — to deliver goods more quickly, interact with customers faster and create new tools at an increasingly rapid rate.
Changes ushered in by AI will help companies that embrace them and put up barriers for those that don’t, Amazon Chief Executive Officer Jeff Bezos said in his annual shareholder letter earlier this month.
The dolphin project — a planned four-year effort — came about because Gavagai’s software has proven capable in real-life, natural language processing, CEO Lars Hamberg said by phone.
Although there is no immediate business purpose, the research on dolphins will help the company sharpen its tool for other tasks, he said.
With new recording methods and larger resources for computation, more dolphin data is available, which is why Hamberg is confident Gavagai will unlock their dictionary and ultimately communicate with the animals, he said.
For decades, the US Navy has used marine mammals such as dolphins and sea lions to carry out a range of tasks, from locating underwater mines to harbour defense. The animals are part of the Space and Naval Warfare Systems Center Pacific, located in San Diego, California.
Gavagai has spent about US$10 million (S$13.98 million) over the past few years developing its language AI machine, Mr Hamberg said.
The company’s customers include WPP Group’s market research company Kantar, SAS Institute, and Nielsen Holdings. BLOOMBERG