Can AI Help Us Talk to Whales?

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  • čas přidán 2. 05. 2024
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    New technology is revolutionizing how we study and protect nature. In this video, we’ll learn how artificial intelligence is being used to decode the sonic landscapes of the ocean - specifically, whale song. That’s right, there may come a day soon where AI allows us to understand and talk to whales. But some scientists are saying: the question may not be CAN we talk to whales, but SHOULD we talk to whales?
    Want to learn more? Read "How to Speak Whale" by Tom Mustill: www.tommustill.com/how-to-spe...
    0:00 Intro - What it's like to be a whale
    1:44 Ch. 1 - The record that saved Earth's whales from extinction
    5:01 Ch. 2 - Can AI help figure out what whale songs mean?
    6:39 Ch. 3 - Living in a world of sound (umwelt)
    8:25 Ch. 4 - How do whales make sounds, anyway?
    10:26 Ch. 5 - We need to talk about the L word
    11:51 Ch. 6 - How AI is already changing whale research
    13:10 Ch. 7 - Training computers to listen to animals
    15:46 Ch. 8 - How can we decode what a whale song means?
    17:17 Ch. 9 - Making WhaleGPT is so much harder than we realize
    19:48 Ch. 10 - Should we really be doing this?
    21:43 Follow me to Planet Wild!
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Komentáře • 932

  • @besmart
    @besmart  Před 12 dny +95

    So… what would YOU say to a whale?
    When you're done here, follow me to Planet Wild to find out how we used drones to drop camera tags on blue whales! www.planetwild.com/besmart/14_2

  • @kirnupiimaa
    @kirnupiimaa Před 12 dny +533

    "Sorry for making lamp oil out of most of your ancestors. It was very premium stuff though!"

    • @immko
      @immko Před 12 dny +26

      not sure if ancestors is the best word here as it would be their moms, dads and grandparents.

    • @davidpavel5017
      @davidpavel5017 Před 11 dny +46

      ​@@immko yes, thats what ancestors means

    • @ConcreteLand
      @ConcreteLand Před 11 dny +3

      @@davidpavel5017🤣🤣🤣

    • @lars3509
      @lars3509 Před 11 dny +30

      Considering that whales have a lifespan of ~100 years, some even above 200 years it is more like "Sorry that we slaughtered your brothers and daughters for candles". Maybe a species that's kicking baby seals 50 m high in the air for fun would understand, though.

    • @aboomination897
      @aboomination897 Před 11 dny +7

      sorry for collapsing your food chains

  • @CrashingThunder
    @CrashingThunder Před 12 dny +384

    One argument to try to communicate with whales is that it would give us insights into how we could potentially communicate with other intelligent life in the universe. Much like in the movie Arrival, communication is about gathering context, gaining understanding, and making connections. Figuring out how to do that with whales is a tough challenge that we would learn from.

    • @supersleepygrumpybear
      @supersleepygrumpybear Před 12 dny +19

      Us: "Hey, intelligent alien life. How's it going?"
      Intelligent Alien Life: "Have You Read The Three-Body Problem? The sequel's pretty good! Our culture calls it: foreshadowing..."

    • @piedpiper1172
      @piedpiper1172 Před 12 dny +3

      @@supersleepygrumpybearUs: “Yeah, but the third book kinda fell off ngl. Anyway, wanna go with specicide or MAD?”

    • @joeis18
      @joeis18 Před 12 dny +10

      If we can't figure out how to talk to another mammal, I feel like we're fucked for communicating anything other than math to aliens.

    • @pubudusenarathne
      @pubudusenarathne Před 11 dny +5

      Also we might learn a lot of stuff about earth and other animals and many more from those legendary species. I believe they have wisdom that transcends through their generations for all these years!

    • @DrVonJay
      @DrVonJay Před 11 dny +7

      I think everyone’s missing the point. It’s not about using this info to talk to aliens, it’s just the human condition. We’re social animals and our happiness, survival and evolution is somewhat dependent on how social we are. And I’m not saying that from the perspective of us needing to talk to animals to ensure our survival and happiness, just from the point of socialization being part of the human condition. It’s an indelible part of our existence. Even as an introvert I would love to be able to know what a whale, monkey or tree kangaroo is thinking. How they think, how different it is from the way we think, or whatever. Connecting to others, even as an introvert, is just a supremely satisfying thing to think about and do. Now imagine being about to do that with a freakin’ whale.

  • @Minty1337
    @Minty1337 Před 12 dny +185

    imagine we translate whale-song/speech and we find out the recording we put on the voyager record is something stupid like an argument

    • @mayasu4277
      @mayasu4277 Před 12 dny +27

      Or something about poop

    • @clamhammer2463
      @clamhammer2463 Před 11 dny +6

      @@mayasu4277 what evolutionary benefit would there be to shouting up to 1000 km about poop?

    • @mayasu4277
      @mayasu4277 Před 11 dny +33

      @@clamhammer2463 I don’t hear us talking about evolutionary benefitial things all the time why should they

    • @taylorrhyne502
      @taylorrhyne502 Před 11 dny +8

      What if they are talking about foreplay? That would be embarrassing

    • @MrFram
      @MrFram Před 11 dny +39

      @@clamhammer2463 you are currently talking to people about poop across 1000s of kilometers

  • @JoyThiefTheBand
    @JoyThiefTheBand Před 12 dny +663

    I certainly hope one day we find a way to properly communicate with at least one species, and then maybe a few more people will start to understand the world we are part of, rather than thinking we exist separate to nature. If you pull back far enough, we're all one big organism on Earth.

    • @66556086
      @66556086 Před 12 dny +21

      Hippie

    • @JoyThiefTheBand
      @JoyThiefTheBand Před 12 dny

      @@66556086 Metalhead, but if loving the Earth makes me a hippie, then hell yeah. I definitely don't hate the mother of everything.

    • @JoyThiefTheBand
      @JoyThiefTheBand Před 12 dny +1

      @@66556086 Metalhead, but if loving the Earth makes me a hippie, then hell yeah, brother. I certainly don't hate the Mother of us all.

    • @itsgonnabeanaurfromme
      @itsgonnabeanaurfromme Před 12 dny +8

      We as a species will never achieve that if people like this still think we are one big organism. Maybe learn science?

    • @torobeltran1
      @torobeltran1 Před 12 dny +36

      We can sign language back and forth with trained Gorillas.

  • @planet-wild
    @planet-wild Před 11 dny +100

    Thank you so much, Joe, for hosting our latest Planet Wild mission! Your passion and insights made the exploration of using cutting-edge technology to study blue whales not only educational but truly captivating. We're thrilled to have had the opportunity to collaborate with you on this fascinating project.

    • @besmart
      @besmart  Před 11 dny +12

      Likewise! So proud to be part of your amazing mission!

    • @MariaLlanos-rh3jc
      @MariaLlanos-rh3jc Před 11 dny +3

      Thanks for what you are doing, guys! I’m impressed with your efforts and transparency!

  • @Linuxpunk81
    @Linuxpunk81 Před 12 dny +192

    I am a retired submarine sonar tech and listening to whale song and other sea creatures was the only thing getting me through those long boring midwatches sometimes

    • @ReginaldCarey
      @ReginaldCarey Před 11 dny +5

      Did you feel like you could recognize individuals?

    • @Reefnow
      @Reefnow Před 11 dny

      I do look for a job

    • @diegoandrade3792
      @diegoandrade3792 Před 7 dny

      Second to God 🤘🏼

    • @kellydalstok8900
      @kellydalstok8900 Před 6 dny +2

      @@diegoandrade3792 Which god, and why that particular one?
      What’s your best evidence it exists? The bible is the claim, and “look at the trees” or “everything that is created needs a creator” isn’t quite going to cut it, I’m afraid.

    • @DanceFacility
      @DanceFacility Před 5 dny

      I'm an atheist, and just let them be. Don't try to "disprove" their beliefs or call them "gullible". Just be respectful. ​@@kellydalstok8900

  • @MichaelStaghorn
    @MichaelStaghorn Před 12 dny +87

    I'm not at all worried/thinking about what if those whale "songs" we sent into space are actually them being like "Help, the hairless monkeys are after me!" and "Save me from these brutal genocidal maniacs!" etc. Nope, not at all... 😬

    • @ericarichardson2983
      @ericarichardson2983 Před 12 dny +20

      It’s ok crew of the Enterprise took care of that in the 80s

    • @MichaelStaghorn
      @MichaelStaghorn Před 12 dny

      @@ericarichardson2983 🖖

    • @jevinday
      @jevinday Před 11 dny +1

      Seriously though 😔

    • @LuisCastillo-tg6xw
      @LuisCastillo-tg6xw Před 10 dny

      Never thought of that before. Hopefully it won't backfire

    • @liam78587
      @liam78587 Před 9 dny

      and thus began the execution of our species we never saw it coming it was our fault the price we had to pay for our ignorance

  • @SciMinute
    @SciMinute Před 12 dny +167

    Seeing this makes me hopeful that we’ll be able to talk to other animals someday!
    Honestly, I don’t think it’s that far off

    • @supersleepygrumpybear
      @supersleepygrumpybear Před 12 dny +2

      My cat loves talking to me. Especially when she's hungry 😻

    • @MisterMakerNL
      @MisterMakerNL Před 12 dny +4

      We already know a lot what animals say.... It's just not interesting, it doesn't go much deeper than very basic communication.

    • @EveningGoDs
      @EveningGoDs Před 11 dny +1

      Rick and Morty ~ Talking squirrels

    • @kellydalstok8900
      @kellydalstok8900 Před 6 dny

      @@supersleepygrumpybear Does your cat follow you every time you walk in the direction of the kitchen too?

  • @Kirhean
    @Kirhean Před 11 dny +28

    Why should we try to talk with whales:
    1. Because it's cool
    2. It's a learning experience for communicating with potential extraterrestrial life.
    3. Being able to communicate with another species would be a massive boon for conservation efforts.
    4. We share this world with them. If they're as intelligent as they seem to be, then we owe it to them to be better roommates, and opening a dialogue would be an excellent first step.
    5. (this space reserved for black swan events)

    • @schg1n_069
      @schg1n_069 Před 7 dny +6

      You had me at number 1 ngl

    • @The_Primitive
      @The_Primitive Před 4 dny +2

      number 1 and 3 are the most important

    • @frankjames180
      @frankjames180 Před 23 hodinami +1

      I think number 3 is important and number 4 should almost be a priority.

  • @newproductions4092
    @newproductions4092 Před 11 dny +25

    Came back to say thanks for introducing me to Planet Wild. What a great initiative. Their videos are so hopeful. Cool that you’re a part of this

  • @MT-xy2di
    @MT-xy2di Před 11 dny +30

    I saw the Planet Wild video first,and then I came to your channel. Wow. Both videos are awesome. Thank you so much for your great work

    • @besmart
      @besmart  Před 11 dny +1

      Awesome! Thank you!

  • @elraviv
    @elraviv Před 11 dny +51

    17:58 The first whales appeared 50 million years ago, not 150 million years ago.

    • @Stierenkloot
      @Stierenkloot Před 11 dny +10

      And humans have been around longer than 100,000 years

    • @joejoeington6899
      @joejoeington6899 Před 11 dny +5

      @@Stierenkloot in our current form

    • @DrachenGothik666
      @DrachenGothik666 Před 10 dny +11

      @@joejoeington6899 Anatomically modern humans have been around for roughly 300K years. It just took a long time for the technological advances to get going.

    • @kpeteho6ot
      @kpeteho6ot Před 10 dny +8

      Yeah, what was that 150 million about. Sure you had ichthyosaurs during the mesozoic that resembled dolphins but were not really cetaceans. From what I remember it was 55 million years ago that ancestors of cetaceans first started adapting to aquatic life.

    • @eroero830
      @eroero830 Před dnem

      @@kpeteho6ot 150 sounds better

  • @MuffinHop
    @MuffinHop Před 12 dny +96

    Prairie Dogs have also been found to have possibly the most complex language after humans, we could try to talk to them as well.

    • @Cajek2
      @Cajek2 Před 12 dny +4

      "Complex" as in they can identify any of the sixteen thousand annoying objects/creatures that almost step in their holes, right? Not "complex" in an interesting way, right? Lemme know if I'm wrong pls

    • @MuffinHop
      @MuffinHop Před 12 dny +25

      @@Cajek2 Professor Constantine Slobodchikoff is an animal behaviorist and conservation biologist. He is a professor at Northern Arizona University and he has made a 40 year study of the language of prairie dogs. Their language skills are not only the most complex, but also have traits that are only ever displayed by humans such as displacement. Displacement conversation is talking about something that is not in Immediate sight. So far only humans and prairie dogs are believed to do this. Not even the other primates do it, nor whales or dolphins. His work is fascinating.
      There have been also cases of where prairie dogs have pre-planned to trap a snake disturbing a prairie dog town by planning dead end holes for these snakes and burying them alive.
      Prairie dogs have adjectives, verbs and subjects, so they are able to recognise individual species and where they are going. They also come up with new words and have different languages in different areas like humans have Spanish and Chinese.

    • @franciscoyahari1593
      @franciscoyahari1593 Před 12 dny +2

      @@Cajek2 It's probably more complex than you think, or maybe not, we can't know at least for now.

    • @MuffinHop
      @MuffinHop Před 12 dny +12

      They also have some kind of social chatter but we haven't cracked the rosetta stone to this due to lack of context and AI would definitely be an interesting use case for this.

    • @franciscoyahari1593
      @franciscoyahari1593 Před 12 dny +2

      @@MuffinHop This is so cool!

  • @kevinamery5922
    @kevinamery5922 Před 12 dny +113

    Here's the thing: the question of "why would you talk to a whale?" is effectively the same as "why would you talk to an extra terrestrial?" All of the objections the interviewees made about talking to whales are just as valid when talking about, say, the inhabitants of Proxima Centauri C.

    • @Shadow05eth
      @Shadow05eth Před 11 dny +44

      This is a question that I don't quite understand coming from scientists. My answer to that question would be "Why not?". They dedicated their life to understanding whales so why wouldn't they want to be able to ask the whales their question directly? The same question could be asked about anything: "Why draw pictures?", "Why make music?", "Why study nature?" and the answer is simply "Because we are curious".

    • @nunya___
      @nunya___ Před 11 dny +11

      @@Shadow05eth Also, whale jokes. I want to know if they laugh. Some primate seem to and many animals show happiness and empathy for their friends/family (barnyard animals do) protecting each other from predators. So ya, let's see what they have to say.

    • @gammaboy4568
      @gammaboy4568 Před 11 dny +11

      @@Shadow05eth "Science isn't about 'why', it's about 'why not!'"

    • @GabrielPettier
      @GabrielPettier Před 11 dny +5

      This video made me think about the possible consequences of learning to talk to them, and i'm pretty sur they would suffer from it, as we would quickly put them to work.

    • @silver831cali3
      @silver831cali3 Před 11 dny +5

      Aliens... Because of technology. It's like saying why would you talk to someone else who speaks a different language.
      Edit: learning how to communicate with another species is the starting point for future communication with aliens

  • @michaelmeyers4843
    @michaelmeyers4843 Před 12 dny +92

    Shoutout to the time that Dr. Heinz Doofenshmirtz taught himself whalesong so that he could insult the macaroni and cheese recipe of a whale!

  • @MariaMartinez-researcher
    @MariaMartinez-researcher Před 12 dny +25

    04:26. Also, in 1986, the movie Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home a.k.a. The One With the Whales, made the existence of humpback whales a key for the planet's survival.

    • @aliceignis
      @aliceignis Před 11 dny +4

      Thank you for commenting this! 🖖🏻 I was very disapointed that this was not mantioned in this video! 😢

    • @rowannadon7668
      @rowannadon7668 Před 10 dny +1

      My favorite movie. Lol. Directed by Leonard Nimoy

  • @benmcreynolds8581
    @benmcreynolds8581 Před 11 dny +17

    Sperm whale's sonar abilities really blow my mind. They are capable of using sonar as a weapon if they aim it and just blast things with extreme sonar. They also dive super deep and hunt squid in pitch black so sonar is crucial. It's fascinating

  • @yayezoh
    @yayezoh Před 11 dny +50

    You could just ask your mom what they’re saying

  • @CinderAndAsh-Metalworks
    @CinderAndAsh-Metalworks Před 12 dny +57

    This is the right use of ai in my opinion. Doing something that advances our understanding of something and doing something we couldn't do on our own

  • @Peter-of7iy
    @Peter-of7iy Před 11 dny +16

    I love Joe and I love Planet Wild. So great to see them collaborate. I watched both videos and I learned so much about the fascinating world of blue whales. 🐳❤

  • @petsgamesandrobots438
    @petsgamesandrobots438 Před 12 dny +23

    woah the new subnautica graphics are looking good

  • @ReginaldCarey
    @ReginaldCarey Před 12 dny +37

    6:28 As an AI researcher, it’s worth pointing out that what the host is asking is exactly what these large language models are. They learn to predict any signal. In any number of dimensions

    • @TheGrinningViking
      @TheGrinningViking Před 12 dny +3

      Hmmm, they learn to predict an answer that the user would like.
      I think the current predictive models would tell a very interesting story about what the whale was saying, and true AGI would say "they are communicating location, desire to mate, food, pain, and little else "

    • @ReginaldCarey
      @ReginaldCarey Před 12 dny +7

      @@TheGrinningViking that’s not how they are trained. At least not the base model. In the base model, the objective is to predict the next word. Using such a pre trained model, you could achieve what you state.

    • @LimeyLassen
      @LimeyLassen Před 12 dny

      If someone asked you to tackle this project, how would you approach it?

    • @purewaterruler
      @purewaterruler Před 12 dny +2

      ​@@LimeyLassenI'm not an ai researcher, but I know some stuff about ai, and the first sort of strategy for tackling this would be 2 fold: take these recordings of whales sounds, and try to use ai to categorize individual sections into different "words" of some sort. Then, we can rewrite the audio in terms of those words, and apply the transformer models to them. The first step would be much harder to get correct, especially with having to deal with the possibility of multiple voices occurring at the same time, but it at least sounds like a feasible path.

    • @ForestRaptor
      @ForestRaptor Před 11 dny +2

      @@purewaterruler This is the one
      AI would help where our ears and eyes and brains can't parse things evenly. good thing there is thousands of upon hours of recordings. Then use that to see how our current understanding of it "fits" those parsed "words", and yeah then applying it what we know is corolated and perhaps see what the image looks like from there.

  • @dmac7128
    @dmac7128 Před 11 dny +8

    Perhaps using AI to listen and understand whale song is best. I think one of thing they might say is "it's too noisy down here". One of the biggest threats to their long term survival is the steady increase in ambient noise due to shipping, fishing, and petroleum extraction, and their related activities. It stands to reason that they depend on their whale song for communication, navigation, finding food, and responding to threats. That is a challenge to deciphering a language if it exists. Whale songs are probably used for other purposes than speech.

  • @cookicha
    @cookicha Před 12 dny +9

    17:50 Wait, what, 150 MY?! I thought whales appeared quickly after the -65MY extinction event. There's an episode on PBS Eons about it. Someone knows more?

    • @meetontheledge1380
      @meetontheledge1380 Před 11 dny +11

      They are WAY off with the 150 million years. Maybe they meant 50 million. YT seems to have cut off all my comments, but, for what it's worth...

    • @pranavrai99
      @pranavrai99 Před 11 dny +5

      Yeah the 150 million years thing is definitely wrong

    • @refindoazhar1507
      @refindoazhar1507 Před 3 dny +1

      At that point in time they still share the same ancestor with us

  • @SandroBoka-ez6po
    @SandroBoka-ez6po Před 11 dny +4

    This has to be my favourite video of yours. The quality and the content of this video truly was amazing. Keep on the great work.

  • @maxmusterman3371
    @maxmusterman3371 Před 12 dny +51

    Now google even harvest whales for their data

  • @PlayNowWorkLater
    @PlayNowWorkLater Před 11 dny

    Umwelt!! Love this! I read about this concept years ago when I was going to university and exploring language, semiotics, and intelligence. So cool to see some current research and how it applies to Ai. Great video!

  • @hcolleen534
    @hcolleen534 Před 8 dny

    When I was in junior high, I wanted to be a cetacean sociologist...partially inspired by Star Trek IV, and partially by a science research paper I did then. I *loved* listening to whale song and had several tapes and cds, some with classical/new age music with the whale song. Thanks for the happy memories :)

  • @WhyIsTheMooseLoose
    @WhyIsTheMooseLoose Před 12 dny +15

    Hey! I just want to say thank you so much for your content! You are awesome (:

  • @pranavrai99
    @pranavrai99 Před 11 dny +7

    Wait, you made a whole episode about whale communication and did not invite the biggest expert in this field, Dory?!! 😱

    • @besmart
      @besmart  Před 11 dny +5

      She kept forgetting our interview appointment!

    • @pranavrai99
      @pranavrai99 Před 11 dny

      @@besmart 😂😂🫶🏼

    • @vexxi1470
      @vexxi1470 Před 5 dny +1

      she got cancelled on twitter🐠

  • @crowlsyong
    @crowlsyong Před 11 dny +1

    9:46 lol I appreciate the editor or whoever did the MRI acronym here. Cheers.

  • @injunsun
    @injunsun Před 11 dny +1

    @besmart, what is hilarious is, when you get to the idea that wanting to communicate with whales is human-centred, all of the researchers use human perspective to answer the question, "What would you ask them?"
    What would *I* ask them? I would ask, "What is important to *you,* and btw, what is the general consensus among you about us humans?" I would want to know what they consider to be beautiful in sound, or whatever other medium they use. I would ask them what they might want to know about me, about us, about our arts and sciences. I would be open and honest. I would ask them what I could do for them, help them with, or share with them, Would they like to hear human music? Would they like to become famous as singers among humans? How can our cultures exchange in a way that would benefit our world?

  • @RPSchonherr
    @RPSchonherr Před 11 dny +3

    It's a similar thing with birds. They communicate with what we call songs, Yet we haven't been able to really talk to them in their language. And we've been able to study them closely for a long time.

    • @indianministryofilluminati3531
      @indianministryofilluminati3531 Před 11 dny +1

      Maybe birds are just using simple sounds to communicate, not language. Ravens are quite intelligent, and so are octopuses/octopi and chimps, but we're not focusing on them rn. The best candidate for having a language is currently sperm whale.

  • @dasiro
    @dasiro Před 12 dny +4

    16:32 Whales aren't the easiest to observe, but we already have other highly social animal species in observation. It wouldn't be too hard to fully cover for example a chimpanzee habitat with sensors and monitor a baby from the moment it's born until it's mature enough to communicate which usually takes much less than 5 years and that's for a very closely related species. Other species with a shorter lifespan would even be faster to comprehend such as our beloved pets: cats and dogs also interact with each other and mature in less than a year. So while whales are the biggest challenge, other species are a lot more accessible.

    • @penguinista
      @penguinista Před 11 dny +2

      It. doesn't seem like very many animals have commuication that looks as much. like lannguage as whales, so studying them might not lead to a translator. Birds and bats seem to me like good potentials to study.

  • @TheOicyu812
    @TheOicyu812 Před 11 dny +1

    1:57 --- Growing up in the 70s, my parents had that exact same vinyl record of Songs of the Humpback Whale. Fond memories of listening to it. I wonder whatever became of that album.

  • @OGNibblybits
    @OGNibblybits Před 11 dny +1

    Alot of understanding animals is to learn body language. It's astounding how much they try to communicate.
    My dog I swear reads my mind

  • @jimmytaco6738
    @jimmytaco6738 Před 12 dny +27

    I guess whale have to see.

  • @johnlash6511
    @johnlash6511 Před 12 dny +3

    The whales probably would have a better conversation then most people I run into

  • @NikoKun
    @NikoKun Před 12 dny

    Amazing stuff, and I can't wait to see where it leads..
    Although, the biggest issue I can imagine with talking to animals like whales.. is that if we abuse that ability, if we betray them or trick them, they'll quickly learn to ignore us, and future communication will become less likely.

  • @crowlsyong
    @crowlsyong Před 11 dny +1

    13:36 You refenced a pretty important article here: Attention Is All You Need. This is really cool.

  • @Istandby666
    @Istandby666 Před 12 dny +4

    Star Trek made a movie about whales and how important they are to this planet.

    • @PistolPat
      @PistolPat Před 12 dny +4

      "They like you very much, but they are not the hell your whales."

    • @emilystrange4347
      @emilystrange4347 Před 12 dny +3

      Was looking for this reply! I thought this was going to be mentioned in the video!

  • @anonymousbosch9265
    @anonymousbosch9265 Před 11 dny +1

    Firstly knowledge for knowledge sake is good and secondly if we figure out what whales are saying to each other it will give us insight into what we might say to them but learning what they’re saying to each other is enough for me to be fascinated

  • @_ninthRing_
    @_ninthRing_ Před 8 dny +1

    They would probably come to call us the "noisy, stinky people" due to the sheer volume of both noise & chemical pollution we saturate their sea with.
    Currently, the human generated noise from boat engines (louder than you'd think due to cavitation), sonar & even nets grinding up the ocean bottom, has got to be severely cluttering up their pristine ocean umwelten. Because of the extemely powerful low frequency signals it uses, deep sea sonar alone has been linked to hunsreds of whale deaths (Sperm & Minke whales), with it thought that the powerful sounds caused caused their (relatively) delicate ear bones to disintegrate (making entire pods of whales repeatedly beach themselves).
    It's a damn shame that we don't have more whale song from earlier in their history - before we decimated many whale species (+), killing the singers of old songs before they could pass them on, or the young ones before they could learn them. I would imagine their "lexicon" would have been profoundly richer, with songs going back centuries but also with the addition of new components from each new generation.
    (+) Not that some groups (like the Japanese) ever stopped the mass killing of whales. Their harvesting of whales for meat - & especially their goddamn horrific Taiji dolphin slaughter - continue to this day. The volume of public outcry, though, has reduced to a whisper.

  • @rickseiden1
    @rickseiden1 Před 12 dny +6

    I think I agree with folks in this video who are more concerned about listening to the whales than talking to them. It's not about what I say to the whale, but what the whale says to me that matters.

  • @RoyalDetailing661
    @RoyalDetailing661 Před 11 dny +4

    If A.I. is capable of decoding whale sounds that’d be an amazing breakthrough and could potentially lead to us understanding Migo’s and other mumble rap artists lyric’s one day. Absolutely terrifying!

  • @blondcub82
    @blondcub82 Před dnem

    The umwelt thing about a human way of greeting and asking another animal about how it’s doing… might work for an animal that doesn’t have an ultrasonic capability that can literally peer into the physical body and understand the physiology of what it’s encountering/examining. And by understanding how the physiological and biological processes relates to the body of the organism it’s examining in ultrasonic sensory… it may get enough information simply from that observation; that it never “needs” to ask the question. They may solely communicate about observations and needs and future plans of sorts. Their culture and language may be based around the fact that they can’t hide anything in a physical sense from each other… only deeply unique, private thoughts that are rarely sung out loud unless specifically pertinent. It’s fun to speculate.

  • @strider_hiryu850
    @strider_hiryu850 Před dnem +1

    this is so exciting. i hope one day we can use this technology for conservation

  • @RoxaneJ14
    @RoxaneJ14 Před 12 dny +3

    Sttaaaaaayyyyyyy cccuuuuurrriiiiooooouuuuussss hahahahahahah

  • @Hunnid24
    @Hunnid24 Před 11 dny +3

    This is basically a 23mins long ad for AI.

    • @sanros3962
      @sanros3962 Před 4 dny

      Damn right, after all it deserves an “ad” even for longer amount of time

  • @FunBotan
    @FunBotan Před 12 dny +2

    CETI is hands down the most mindblowing scientific project going on at the moment. So mindblowing that we may not be ready for what we hear back.

  • @adgmendes
    @adgmendes Před 2 dny

    When we are talking about 'listening', from our umwelt(?), it does not mean somebody who is only passively listening. A good listener, for most people on earth, is someone who listen and speak back sometimes, to show they relate to your words, to say they feel something about what you're saying, whatever.
    I think we should be good listeners, if we can.

  • @kjnoah
    @kjnoah Před 12 dny +4

    We should talk to them. We could communicate how we can avoid bothering each other and instead of beaching themselves to keep from predation when they are sick, we could meet them, provide help and protection. We could ask them if they want to remain in a zoo or be free. Unless you are so narcissistic to assume to know what is best for them, it makes sense to want to ask what they think is best for them.

  • @13orrax
    @13orrax Před 12 dny +5

    we need to figure this out before that whale probe from star trek iv gets here

  • @charlotteparadis4754
    @charlotteparadis4754 Před 11 dny

    Fascinating video, thank you! The idea of our human lenses getting in the way is so interesting! It must be quite s challenge to think outside of our human-ness: how can one identify what’s specifically human and what is more universal/objective? Some things are indeed quite obvious, as stated (I’m sorry, how are you), but I imagine there must be a whole array of things that maybe are more subtle and that impact the way scientists approach various questions.

  • @karlozfox
    @karlozfox Před 6 dny

    Minute 5:30 and I'm sobbing. Why are these videos so good? ❤

  • @hypercoder-gaming
    @hypercoder-gaming Před 12 dny +5

    (I haven't finished the video yet but I just wanted to say this) When you said that it was one thing for ChatGPT to help you write a title for a video but completely different for it to interpret whales, of course ChatGPT wouldn't be able to do it. But AI in general can adapt to nearly anything. Since it adapted to human language, it's reasonable to assume it could adapt to whale language which is probably not much more complex (if at all) than human language.

    • @itsgonnabeanaurfromme
      @itsgonnabeanaurfromme Před 12 dny +4

      Did you think he was serious? Did you think he was actually saying to use ChatGPT for this?

  • @NewMessage
    @NewMessage Před 12 dny +6

    This is how AI and the whales team up to conquer us!

  • @StephenMcGregor1986
    @StephenMcGregor1986 Před 3 dny

    I unironically asked an AI this question and it's response -
    "The idea of communicating with whales is fascinating, and AI could potentially play a role in facilitating such interspecies communication, though there are significant challenges involved.
    Some ways AI might assist in talking to whales include:
    - Analyzing whale vocalizations and body language using machine learning models to try to decipher patterns and potential meanings. AI could help identify distinct "words" or signals whales use.
    - Translating between the acoustics and timing patterns of whale communication and human language formats that are easier for us to comprehend.
    - Simulating and generating potential whale vocalizations that could be played back to whales to attempt primitive communication once patterns are recognized.
    - Controlling underwater robots or interfaces that could both receive and broadcast communication attempts with whales more naturally in their environments.
    However, the barriers are still immense. Whale intelligence, language capacity, and methods of communication are very different from humans. We may be fundamentally unable to communicate rich conceptual information between the species.
    Additionally, the risk of disturbing whale behavior or causing unintended harm through incorrect assumptions about communication acts as an ethical constraint on such experimentation currently.
    So while AI analysis and simulation tools could provide avenues for exploration, deciphering and communicating with an alien intelligence like whales may remain extremely challenging even with advanced AI capabilities involved. It's a fascinating goal that may require an extended "listening" period before two-way interaction can be realistically achieved, if ever."

  • @MrT3a
    @MrT3a Před 11 dny

    "Learn to be better listeners" that stands true both toward animals and especially our fellow human beings.
    We should learn to listen to all earthlings. We stand to comprehend a lot more.

  • @irenafarm
    @irenafarm Před 12 dny +3

    I hope we don’t take the AI generated language results too seriously. Based on how well ChatGPT is working currently, we’re likely to learn (incorrectly) that whales are plotting to multiply enough to displace ocean water and raise sea levels to drown the humans.

  • @40TM40
    @40TM40 Před 11 dny +3

    Umwelt = environment ?

    • @Edda-Online
      @Edda-Online Před 11 dny +1

      Yep. Umwelt is a German word and translates to environment. Heaven knows, why the didn't say environment.

  • @stpfs9281
    @stpfs9281 Před dnem

    Roger and Katy Payne!
    Biggest record pressing of all time?!
    Umwelt.
    Ai Whale tales, brilliant.
    150 million years of Whales communicating with each other.
    The change in body language of a wild bird, when you mimic their sounds, is priceless!
    I've had Nuthatches come up to me to see what was making the noise, the dog I was walking with became very angry!
    Bullfinches replying and popping out of hiding to see me. :)

  • @LEDewey_MD
    @LEDewey_MD Před 11 dny +1

    Wonderful video about a captivating subject! ❤

  • @CharlesTheClumsy
    @CharlesTheClumsy Před 11 dny +5

    Are you ever gonna get older?

  • @DaanSlayer
    @DaanSlayer Před 12 dny +4

    Whales first comment to humans - " Stop destroying my planet!"

  • @LiFeeIsSMusicC
    @LiFeeIsSMusicC Před 8 hodinami

    I was most interested in the first part of the video , about the history of whale hunting , and how a song changed the perception of humans about it

  • @injinii4336
    @injinii4336 Před 11 dny +1

    I think we should. Absolutely. I just want to know who they are and what their world is like.
    I have a difficult time believing that understanding them would incentivize us to treat them with less compassion.

  • @GlenHunt
    @GlenHunt Před 12 dny +4

    AI can help us talk to whales, but it won't help us understand their laughing at what we actually say.

  • @BeastlyP1g
    @BeastlyP1g Před 12 dny +4

    I love the thought of us investing years of AI development into understanding their language only to learn whales exclusively make "Your mom's so fat" jokes.

  • @psychoedge
    @psychoedge Před 5 dny

    Being German and hearing about "Umwelt" as being a concept introduced to biology in the early 20th century, in turn spawning the field of ecology, is wild. In our everyday language it literally just translates to "surrounding world" - and just means environment and it feels completely natural to use. Hearing English speaking people of scientific background refer to Umwelt as "perceived environment of an animal" feels a little odd, like someone using a word way too specifically, even though they're not wrong. I would've expected that word to be way older, too (it was borrrowed from Danish and used since the 19th century, but only in a geographical sense). Thanks for providing this little trip into my own language's heritage.

  • @MaxShaffer
    @MaxShaffer Před 11 dny

    Those whale song spectrograms on a poster would be great merch! I'd buy it.

  • @THE-X-Force
    @THE-X-Force Před 12 dny +4

    "A.I." can barely talk to humans.

    • @JoyThiefTheBand
      @JoyThiefTheBand Před 12 dny

      For now. I think the last 24-36 months has shown us how drastically things can change with AI.

  • @davidschaftenaar6530
    @davidschaftenaar6530 Před 4 dny

    I think that it'd be possible to construct a language model that could accurately capture the complexities of whatever language(s) whales are using to speak with each other. But just because it could 'understand' the patterns involved and produce appropriate responses to whales' sounds, doesn't necessarily mean that it can act as a Rosetta stone between our languages and those of whales. As you pointed out, there is very little that the world of whales has in common with our own. I think our best bet would be to go for what little experiences we do share as social, intelligent, long-lived mammals and build an understanding from that; Concepts like family, mother, child, food, breath, pain, temperature, sight, taste, smell, touch.

  • @johannaverplank4858
    @johannaverplank4858 Před 11 dny +1

    I was born in 1974, and I remember the Save The Wales campaign. It was everywhere. We even learned about it in school and studied wales. They are magnificent creatures.

    • @wbbartlett
      @wbbartlett Před 11 dny +1

      Times have changed. Their language is now taught in their schools, it appears on the road signs & they even have their own parliament - all thanks to those campaigns to Save Wales. I'm not sure I'd call them magnificent though - they have an unhealthy interest in sheep.

  • @thetobyntr9540
    @thetobyntr9540 Před 12 dny +1

    I imagine when they hear us wondering about the fermi patadox, it would go something like this: "there's these guys in a big cylyndrical space ship who like us and they check in every ten thousand years or so, you can say hi to them in a couple hundred years".
    I imagine while needing more weight, a spaceship for aquatic species would be more resilient to radiation and be better at attacking things in space by using that extra mass to ram through large structures. If something whale like became a spacefairing civilization then they would probably be upset that we drove whales extinct.
    Sound can travel insane distances underwater, so you dont need radios in that case, and the fermi paradox could be influenced by the proportion of intelligent species who are whale like.

  • @NoName-ik2du
    @NoName-ik2du Před 9 dny

    I feel like the ability to talk to any animal has a very obvious advantage: Being able to communicate how we may be unintentionally hurting each other and figuring out what we can do to help each other (even if that thing is to leave one another alone).
    Example: People kill mice because they are destructive and spread disease. But if people could tell mice, "Hey, stay over in this corner of the garage where you'll have shelter, but don't chew the electrical wires, and don't poop in my kitchen cupboards," then mice and humans could safely cohabitate an area instead of humans simply murdering all mice out of precaution.

  • @aqueuse
    @aqueuse Před 12 dny

    best episode since ..... thank you !

  • @tannerbuschman1
    @tannerbuschman1 Před 12 dny +2

    I really like these experts

  • @MrChazasaurus88
    @MrChazasaurus88 Před 12 dny +2

    I could sway some hearts and minds. Imagine a legit recording of a whale saying something that equates to "humans make water dirty", lol.

  • @Twapska
    @Twapska Před 12 dny +2

    "I Am Leaper" by Annabel Johnson was what I immediately thought of.

  • @UATU.
    @UATU. Před 11 dny

    “Farewell to Tarwathie” by Judy Collins has beautiful whale song. I can’t guess how often I played on my parent’s turntable. ❤️🐳

  • @iilikecereal
    @iilikecereal Před 10 dny

    If I could talk to whales I would communicate to them what parts of the ocean are dangerous, like "there are whaling ships 100 miles that way", "avoid large boats" or "toxic oil spill". The language might be too limited to properly express these things but I think its best used to warn them of the various new dangers we are presenting to them.

  • @alexsmith9617
    @alexsmith9617 Před 11 dny

    When I was a child, both of my parents brought my brothers and I up by encouraging us to seek out the new and unusual . I remember my mother telling me that one of the best ways to expand my mind and actually get smarter was to seek out people who were very different from me. I would expect that actually learning to comprehend the mindset and thought processes of whales would potentially increase our own intelligence.

  • @Bakedea87
    @Bakedea87 Před 10 dny +1

    We've actually wiped out like 90% of the wildlife around the world already and, which is crazy considering how much wildlife still is in some places. 😢

  • @smellthel
    @smellthel Před 8 dny

    A joint society of whales and people would be the coolest thing ever. Every experience we’ve ever had access to came from humans. Getting a completely different perspective from a being with completely different senses sounds mindblowing. Hopefully they’ll forgive us for what our ancestors have done though.

  • @TinyFlyThing
    @TinyFlyThing Před 3 dny

    I would just ask if they want to be friends and if they do, swim with them. Don't know if there is more to say?
    (I think "friend" or something along those lines is something that is universal to social species...probably)

  • @RobBrogan
    @RobBrogan Před 7 dny

    Having this technology doesn't mean we have to have conversations. I think it'd be immensely valuable to simply listen to them.

  • @sgcdialler
    @sgcdialler Před 9 dny

    Just a point of correction, Michelle Fournet was incorrect when she said that whales have been singing for 150 million years. They didn't even evolve to live underwater from their ungulate ancestors until 42-47MYA, and didn't evolve echolocation until ~40MYA. Still impressive, but not 150-million-years-impressive

  • @PennyAfNorberg
    @PennyAfNorberg Před 11 dny

    So there is some dolphins in a zoo in sweden, around 2000 i was there off season and saw their signatures plotted near their pool so i got the idea to analys that by short-time fourier /wavelet to extract info, i didn't do it but like 15 year later a simular project was started at KTH.

  • @shaider1982
    @shaider1982 Před 14 hodinami

    It's nice we have this tech. I remember a story that scientists actually tried to teach English to a dolphin. That was definitely not the way to go.

  • @corlisscrabtree3647
    @corlisscrabtree3647 Před 10 dny

    Thank you 🙏

  • @Videoman2000
    @Videoman2000 Před 2 dny

    I was on a wähle safari last year. I tried to convince the guide that by 2030 then they don't need to look for the whales anymore, they will just ask them come near the boat and do to something for the tourist in exchange for food or so.
    They didn't believe that it will ever be possible.

  • @MissesWitch
    @MissesWitch Před 12 dny +1

    Whale album is just amazing! ❤

  • @chrisaguilera1564
    @chrisaguilera1564 Před 9 dny

    Yes I saw Star Trek 4 the Voyage Home when I was a kid. I never knew they sang songs until then.

  • @DoubleCTech
    @DoubleCTech Před 11 dny

    I think we will be able to communicate just like in the show Extrapolations. I think communication with them should be keep to a minimum through. They honestly might ignore us anyway.

  • @matthewfelgate
    @matthewfelgate Před 12 dny

    It would be cool to communicate with whales, maybe introduce it to a concept or play it some music or something that it could never experience in it's natural environment.

  • @darklion13
    @darklion13 Před 9 dny

    for an AI it really doesn't matter if it is human langue or whale sounds. You have to remember that chatGPT isn't made for humans in any way, it starts of completely alien and but can understand meaning out of the alien langue it have.
    The biggest problem is not to have a context to whale talking. it having enough whale chat, also translating it.

  • @johntresemer5631
    @johntresemer5631 Před 12 dny

    Excellent. Thanks! I think it would be extremely valuable and not disruptive to just listen to and learn from whatever communication is in the humpback song. . . . .There was an unfortunate error in the video. Whales have been around for 50, not 150, million years, and their rapid evolution from land to sea is fascinating and very mysterious how they weren’t eliminated by large well-established predators.

    • @carcyaxon5532
      @carcyaxon5532 Před 11 dny +2

      Also, it was stated that we would need millions of years worth of data to understand whale language, but that doesn't make sense because we didn't need hundreds of thousands of years of data to get computers to use human language. Or languageS, which is also a problem, as different whale species/populations surely have different languages, which wasn't talked about much in relation to the data needed to decipher whale sounds.

  • @Istandby666
    @Istandby666 Před 12 dny +1

    Do whales speak one at a time, or are they rude like humans and talk over others?
    If whales are like humans, rude, how can one determine which sounds are going to and from one single conversation?
    What happens to mammals who are born deaf? How do other mammals communicate with others with disabilities?