Briefly
- Baidu was submitted by a patent to translate cats, movements and vital signs into a regular language.
- The company says combining multiple signals could improve the way people understand pets.
- Experts warn that a true “cat translation” remains unlikely, despite the progress of AI.
For millennia, people wondered what their cats were trying to say. Now, the Chinese technological giant claims that he could have an answer – using Ai to turn meow into ordinary language.
The Chinese Technology Gigant Baid filed a patent last December for a system intended to translate animal sounds – including cat meows – into human language, the report states Scientific American.
The company, often referred to as “Chinese Google” is active expanding your AI portfolio In recent years.
Baid confirmed Reuters Last month that the project is “still in the study phase”.
Patent, published on May 8, published by the Chinese Intellectual Property Administration, describes the collection of animal vocalization, behavior pattern and physiological signals such as heart rate.
This data is then introduced into the AI system to recognize the emotional state of the animal and copy it into the human language.
Baidu claims that access could enable “deeper emotional communication and understanding between animals and humans.”
Research on Communication with AI AI has increased in recent years, from studies that maped cats of vocalization with 90% accuracy of apps like meowtalk, who claims to translate Maca Meows in real time.
In May he discovered entrepreneur Vlad Reznikov Classification of the Cat Gloss 2.3, A system that identifies 40 different types of CAT calls with over 95% accuracy, though it has not yet been subjected to the review.
The growing scientific effort of cat decoding is important beyond curiosity.
As Scientific American Notes, understanding cat communication could deepen the relationships of humans and animals, improve the benefits of pets and discover how dialogue has been shaped by the dialogue of the intermediate.
But experts remain careful about great claims.
“The idea that we can directly translate the languages of animals is … a kind of total nonsense,” said psychologist Kevin Coffee, who studies the vocalization of animals.
Still, he admits the role of AI in helping scientists to better categorize and interpret the sounds of animals.
The beauty of Baidu’s proposed system lies in its extent. By adding the movement of the body, temperature and information about the heart rate, it seeks to create a richer context, not only decoded meoves as “feed me”, but also evaluating emotional shades.
In his patent submission, Baidu said that most of the animal translation tools relied too closely to messengers or facial expressions, limiting their accuracy, according to a South Chinese Morning Post report.
However, significant obstacles remain because the patent examinations could last 1-3 years, the accuracy of the real world must be proven in different animals and dialects, and ethical issues to collect large data.
Edited Stacy Elliott.
Generally intelligent Bulletin
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