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by John Reid
In
an important breakthrough in deciphering dolphin language, researchers
in Great Britain and the United States have imaged the first high
definition imprints that dolphin sounds make in water.
Songs
From The Sea:
Deciphering Dolphin Language with Picture Words
By John Reid
In
an important breakthrough in deciphering dolphin language, researchers
in Great Britain and the United States have imaged the first high
definition imprints that dolphin sounds make in water.
The key to this technique is the CymaScope, a new instrument
that reveals detailed structures within sounds, allowing their
architecture to be studied pictorially. Using high definition audio
recordings of dolphins, the research team, headed by English acoustics
engineer, John Stuart Reid, and Florida-based dolphin researcher, Jack
Kassewitz, has been able to image, for the first time, the imprint
that a dolphin sound makes in water. The resulting "CymaGlyphs," as
they have been named, are reproducible patterns that are expected to
form the basis of a lexicon of dolphin language, each pattern
representing a dolphin ‘picture word.’
Certain sounds made by dolphins have long been suspected to represent
language but the complexity of the sounds has made their analysis
difficult. Previous techniques, using the spectrograph, display
cetacean (dolphins, whales and porpoises) sounds only as graphs of
frequency and amplitude. The CymaScope captures actual sound
vibrations imprinted in the dolphin’s natural environment—water,
revealing the intricate visual details of dolphin sounds for the first
time.
Within the field of cetacean research, theory states that dolphins
have evolved the ability to translate dimensional information from
their echolocation sonic beam. The CymaScope has the ability to
visualize dimensional structure within sound. CymaGlyph patterns may
resemble what the creatures perceive from their own returning sound
beams and from the sound beams of other dolphins.
Reid said that the technique has similarities to deciphering Egyptian
hieroglyphs. "Jean-Francois Champollion and Thomas Young used the
Rosetta Stone to discover key elements of the primer that allowed the
Egyptian language to be deciphered. The CymaGlyphs produced on the
CymaScope can be likened to the hieroglyphs of the Rosetta Stone. Now
that dolphin chirps, click-trains and whistles can be converted into
CymaGlyphs, we have an important tool for deciphering their meaning."
Kassewitz, of the Florida-based
dolphin communication research project SpeakDolphin.com said, “There
is strong evidence that dolphins are able to ‘see’ with sound, much
like humans use ultrasound to see an unborn child in the mother’s
womb. The CymaScope provides our first glimpse into what the dolphins
might be ‘seeing’ with their sounds.”
The team has recognized that sound does not travel in waves, as is
popularly believed, but in expanding holographic bubbles and beams.
The holographic aspect stems from the physics theory that even a
single molecule of air or water carries all the information that
describes the qualities and intensity of a given sound. At frequencies
audible to humans (20 Hertz to 20,000 Hertz) the sound-bubble form
dominates; above 20,000 Hertz the shape of sound becomes increasingly
beam shaped, similar to a lighthouse beam in appearance.
Reid explained their novel sound imaging technique: “Whenever sound
bubbles or beams interact with a membrane, the sound vibrations
imprint onto its surface and form a CymaGlyph, a repeatable pattern of
energy. The CymaScope employs the surface tension of water as a
membrane because water reacts quickly and is able to reveal intricate
architectures within the sound form. These fine details can be
captured on camera.”
Kassewitz has planned a series of experiments to record the sounds of
dolphins targeting a range of objects. Speaking from Key Largo,
Florida, he said, “Dolphins are able to emit complex sounds far above
the human range of hearing. Recent advances in high frequency
recording techniques have made it possible for us to capture more
detail in dolphin sounds than ever before. By recording dolphins as
they echolocate on various objects, and also as they communicate with
other dolphins about those objects, we will build a library of dolphin
sounds, verifying that the same sound is always repeated for the same
object. The CymaScope will be used to image the sounds so that each
CymaGlyph will represent a dolphin ‘picture word’. Our ultimate aim is
to speak to dolphins with a basic vocabulary of dolphin sounds and to
understand their responses. This is uncharted territory but it looks
very promising.”
Dr. Horace Dobbs, a leading authority on dolphin-assisted therapy,
has joined the team as consultant. "I have long held the belief that
the dolphin brain, comparable in size with our own, has specialized in
processing auditory data in much the same way that the human brain has
specialized in processing visual data. Nature tends not to evolve
brain mass without a need, so we must ask ourselves what dolphins do
with all that brain capacity. The answer appears to lie in the
development of brain systems that require huge auditory processing
power. There is growing evidence that dolphins can take a sonic 'snap
shot' of an object and send it to other dolphins, using sound as the
transmission medium. We can therefore hypothesize that the dolphin's
primary method of communication is picture based. Thus, the
picture-based imaging method, employed by Reid and Kassewitz, seems
entirely plausible."
The CymaGlyphs of dolphin sounds fall into three broad categories,
signature whistles, chirps and click trains. There is general
agreement among cetacean biologists that signature whistles represent
the means by which individual dolphins identify themselves while click
trains are involved in echolocation. Chirps are thought to represent
components of language. Reid explained the visual form of the various
dolphin sounds, “The CymaGlyphs of signature whistles comprise regular
concentric bands of energy that resemble aircraft radar screens while
chirps are often flower-like in structure, resembling the CymaGlyphs
of human vocalizations. Click trains have the most complex structures
of all, featuring a combination of tightly packed concentric bands on
the periphery with unique central features.”
Regarding the possibility of speaking dolphin, Kassewitz said, “I
believe that people around the world would love the opportunity to
speak with a dolphin. And I feel certain that dolphins would love the
chance to speak with us – if for no other reason than
self-preservation. During my times in the water with dolphins, there
have been several occasions when they seemed to be very determined to
communicate with me. We are getting closer to making that possible.”
John Reid <
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www.speakdolphin.com
www.cymascope.com
Left: cymaglyph of adult dolphin voice, Right: cymaglyph of a baby dolphin calling to its mother
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