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posted by janrinok on Tuesday September 13 2016, @05:13PM   Printer-friendly
from the click-brzzzp-click dept.

Vyacheslav Ryabov claims to have recorded a conversation between two dolphins demonstrating the use of "words" and "sentences":

A conversation between dolphins may have been recorded by scientists for the first time, a Russian researcher claims. Two adult Black Sea bottlenose dolphins, named Yasha and Yana, didn't interrupt each other during an interaction taped by scientists and may have formed words and sentences with a series of pulses, Vyacheslav Ryabov says in a new paper. "Essentially, this exchange resembles a conversation between two people," Ryabov said.

[...] Using new recording techniques, Ryabov separated the individual "non coherent pulses" the two dolphins made and theorized each pulse was a word in the dolphins' language, while a collection of pulses is a sentence. "As this language exhibits all the design features present in the human spoken language, this indicates a high level of intelligence and consciousness in dolphins," he said in the paper, which was published in the St. Petersburg Polytechnical University Journal: Physics and Mathematics last month. "Their language can be ostensibly considered a high developed spoken language."

click

In his paper, Ryabov calls for humans to create a device by which human beings can communicate with dolphins. "Humans must take the first step to establish relationships with the first intelligent inhabitants of the planet Earth by creating devices capable of overcoming the barriers that stand in the way of ... communications between dolphins and people," he said.

The study of acoustic signals and the supposed spoken language of the dolphins (open, DOI: 10.1016/j.spjpm.2016.08.004) (DX)


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  • (Score: 2) by fritsd on Tuesday September 13 2016, @09:31PM

    by fritsd (4586) on Tuesday September 13 2016, @09:31PM (#401482) Journal

    Swedish got rid of articles. They just glued them to the end of the noun, like this:

    "Boken är på bordet"

    bok = book, bord = table.

    And I'm still not sure when I have to use the passivum form, so that might be different than in surrounding languages.

    On thing I wondered: classical Greek and Sanskriet had the singular (1), plural (many) and also the dualis [wikipedia.org] (exactly 2). But modern European languages that I know seem to have lost that.

    It seems 2000 years ago people had got more grammar than now, and they ditched some. We also lost the optative [wikipedia.org], the medium voice [wikipedia.org] (between active and passive, i.e. for reflexive verbs)

    Language is odd.

    What really shocked me is when I found out, only a few years ago, that English has no good verb for NL: gunnen, DE: gönnen, SV: unna [wiktionary.org]. Sad :-( . Ik gun het je om er een werkwoord voor te bedenken. "wish" is not really a good match., "bestow"/"grant" only for one of its sub-meanings. I mean, come on, this is actually an *important* word , just like "solidarity"

    OK I'll stop rambling now..

    That really brings home the point, that some concepts are just easier to talk about in some languages than in others.

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