Machine Intelligence techniques are helping us to understand non-human animal speech in powerful new ways.
We can begin to decode the meaning and intention of non-human animal noises, and, tantalisingly, to learn that there appears to be a syntax to mouse squeaks, meaning that certain noises in a certain order denote different meanings.
The evidence, therefore, hints at non-human animals having something akin to actual languages. Those grunts and howls convey much more information than mere alarm or domination displays.
We know that non-human animals also have accents (even fish), and that dogs pick up a regional accent that riffs off the accent of their human guardians.
As intelligent machines help us to understand our cousins, perhaps we will finally be obliged to acknowledge their suffering.
Cool!
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