They want to work with dolphins to «co-create» a language that uses features of sounds that
wild dolphins communicate with naturally.
Not exact matches
A DIVER carrying a computer that tries to recognise
dolphin sounds and generate responses in real time will soon attempt to
communicate with
wild dolphins off the coast of Florida.
However, we know very little about the meaning of different howl types and what they are actually
communicating, says Kershenbaum, because — as with
dolphins, that other highly vocal, smart and social species which he studies — wolves are extremely difficult to study in the
wild.
Christopher Clark, a bioacoustician at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, agrees: «This is some of the first information about how
dolphins are
communicating in natural,
wild populations.»
A tribe of Austral indigenous people on the Mornington Island have been
communicating with
wild dolphins for millennia.