How to speak whale A voyage into the future of animal communication
Book - 2022
"What if animals and humans could speak to one another? Tom Mustill-the nature documentarian who went viral when a thirty ton humpback whale breached onto his kayak-asks this question in his thrilling investigation into whale science and animal communication. "When a whale is in the water, it is like an iceberg: you only see a fraction of it and have no conception of its size." On September 12, 2015, Tom Mustill was paddling in a two-person kayak with a friend, just off the coast of California. It was cold, but idyllic-until a humpback whale breached, landing on top of them, releasing the energy equivalent of forty hand grenades. He was certain he was about to die, but both he and his friend survived miraculously unscathed. I...n the interviews that followed the incident, Mustill was left with one question: What could this astonishing encounter teach us? Drawing from his experience as a naturalist and wildlife filmmaker, Mustill started investigating human-whale interactions around the world. When he met two tech entrepreneurs, who told him they wanted to use artificial intelligence (AI) to decode animal communication, Mustill embarked on a journey where big data meets big beasts, using animal eavesdropping technologies to train AI-originally designed to translate human languages-to discover patterns in the conversations of animals. There is a revolution taking place in biology, as the technologies we've developed to explore our own languages are turned to nature. From seventeenth-century Dutch inventors, to the whaling industry of the nineteenth century, to the cutting edge of Silicon Valley, How to Speak Whale looks at how scientists and start-ups around the world are decoding animal languages. Whales, with their giant mammalian brains, offer one of the most realistic opportunities for this to happen. But what would the consequences of such human-animal interaction be? We're about to find out"--
- Subjects
- Genres
- Informational works
- Published
-
New York :
Grand Central Publishing
2022.
- Language
- English
- Main Author
- Edition
- First U.S. edition
- Physical Description
- xviii, 283 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
- Bibliography
- Includes bibliographical references (pages 233-266) and index.
- ISBN
- 9781538739112
- Introduction
- Van Leeuwenhoek Decides to Look
- (New Tools Plus Inquisitive Humans Equals Unexpected Discovery)
- 1. Enter, Pursued by Whale
- (The Twenty-First-Century Revolution in Cetacean Biology, and How I Joined It)
- 2. A Song in the Ocean
- (How We Saved the Whales by Decoding Them)
- 3. The Law of the Tongue
- (Different Species Already Communicate)
- 4. The Joy of Whales
- (Do Cetaceans Have the Tools to Talk and Listen?)
- 5. "Some Sort of Stupid, Big Fish"
- (What Can Whale Brains Tell Us about Their Minds?)
- 6. The Search for Animal Language
- (Let's Avoid the Word "Language")
- 7. Deep Minds: Cetacean Culture Club
- (How Dolphin Behaviors Suggest they're Worth Trying to Chat To)
- 8. The Sea Has Ears
- (Robots Can Record Whale Communications We Never Could Before)
- 9. Animalgorithms
- (How We Can Train Machines to Find Patterns in Cetacean Communications)
- 10. Machines of Loving Grace
- (Google Translate for Whales)
- 11. Anthropodenial
- (Humans Underestimate Other Animals... and Why It Matters)
- 12. Dances with Whales
- (It's Time to Find Out If We Can Speak Whale)
- Acknowledgments
- Notes
- Photo Credits
- Index
- About the Author
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Review by Library Journal Review
Review by Kirkus Book Review