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Science

'Hello!' Says the Human. 'Hello!' Pipes the Orca Right Back. (theguardian.com) 83

A human greets an orca with a "Hello!" "Hello!" responds the orca. A new research shows, the orcas have been able to imitate human speech, in some cases at the first attempt, saying words such as "hello", "one, two," "Amy", and "bye bye." From a report: The study also shows that the creatures are able to copy unfamiliar sounds produced by other orcas -- including a sound similar to blowing a raspberry. Scientists say the discovery helps to shed light on how different pods of wild killer whales have ended up with distinct dialects, adding weight to the idea that they are the result of imitation between orcas. The creatures are already known for their ability to copy the movements of other orcas, with some reports suggesting they can also mimic the sounds of bottlenose dolphins and sea lions. [...] Wikie is not the first animal to have managed the feat of producing human sounds: dolphins, elephants, parrots, orangutans and even beluga whales have all been captured mimicking our utterances, although they use a range of physical mechanisms to us to do so.
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'Hello!' Says the Human. 'Hello!' Pipes the Orca Right Back.

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  • by jellomizer ( 103300 ) on Wednesday January 31, 2018 @01:45PM (#56041767)

    I am good with this just as long as they don't do a "surprisingly sophisticated attempt to do a double-backwards-somersault through a hoop whilst whistling the 'Star Spangled Banner'"

    • by Oswald McWeany ( 2428506 ) on Wednesday January 31, 2018 @02:18PM (#56041985)

      I am good with this just as long as they don't do a "surprisingly sophisticated attempt to do a double-backwards-somersault through a hoop whilst whistling the 'Star Spangled Banner'"

      Surely they wouldn't be whistling the "Star Spangled Banner" they would be singing "Hen Wlad Fy Nhadau", the national anthem of Wales.

      • FYI... yes I know an Orca is a dolphin not a whale (before the Linneaus Nazis arrive)

        • FYI... yes I know an Orca is a dolphin not a whale

          It would never have occurred to me that you didn't know an orca is a dolphin.

          Nonetheless, that joke was really terrible...

          On the plus side, I now know that there is a Welsh national anthem....

          • FYI... yes I know an Orca is a dolphin not a whale

            It would never have occurred to me that you didn't know an orca is a dolphin.

            Nonetheless, that joke was really terrible...

            On the plus side, I now know that there is a Welsh national anthem....

            Granted the joke was terrible.
            / I'm a father, I'm allowed to make bad jokes

            Technically the Welsh national anthem is God Save the Queen (same as all countries within the United Kingdom) but the Welsh and the Scottish have their own pseudo-national anthems too. Only the English don't have their own national anthem within the countries of the UK.

          • FYI... yes I know an Orca is a dolphin not a whale

            It would never have occurred to me that you didn't know an orca is a dolphin.

            Nonetheless, that joke was really terrible...

            On the plus side, I now know that there is a Welsh national anthem....

            I always sing Bonnie Charlie as the Welsh anthem.

          • by quenda ( 644621 )

            On the plus side, I now know that there is a Welsh national anthem....

            It's Not Unusual ...

        • ...before the Linneaus Nazis arrive)

          Taxosaurus allemanicus dexter...

  • Great tits! (Score:2, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward

    The tits know what really matters in the society of today: they mimic our smartphones.

    • by dryeo ( 100693 )

      The tits know what really matters in the society of today: they mimic our smartphones.

      For whoever modded this down, a Tit is a type of small song bird (tit originally meant small rather then being a synonym for teat) and I wouldn't be surprised if they did mimic smartphones.
      I have one Stellars Jay living here that mimics a hawk and Ravens used to be known for killing loggers by imitating the whistles that the high lead loggers used to use to communicate.

    • by Applehu Akbar ( 2968043 ) on Wednesday January 31, 2018 @04:08PM (#56042907)

      The tits know what really matters in the society of today: they mimic our smartphones.

      I went to Google Image for these, and all I got was this bunch of birds.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      It's far more shocking when they imitate the reverse-gear beeps of a truck. I've rarely been so confused in my life, looking for a truck in/behind the bushes, just to realize it's a tiny bird!

  • Perhaps the researchers would prefer to interpret the communication attempt in captivity as "Amy" rather than "Kill Me", just so they can sleep at night.
    • Perhaps the researchers would prefer to interpret the communication attempt in captivity as "Amy" rather than "Kill Me", just so they can sleep at night.

      I don't know who Amy is, but she sounds hot if even Orcas are asking for her by name.

  • by iMadeGhostzilla ( 1851560 ) on Wednesday January 31, 2018 @02:06PM (#56041927)

    Of course they'll do whatever they can do put their prey at ease. ;-)

    • Of course they'll do whatever they can do put their prey at ease. ;-)

      Or bait them to their doom. (Of course the skill is handy for having fun with the handlrs, too.)

      Walruses do this, too. And they regularly eat people if they can get hold of them one-on-one, (to the point that the walrus is the symbol of death for some Inuits).

      (I hear that, a couple decades back, there was one in New York City's Central Park Zoo that started talking like a drunk, with lines like "Hiya, Buddy" in a very slurred form. Appa

  • "It is of interest to note that while some dolphins are reported to have learned English, up to fifty words used in correct context, no human being has been reported to have learned dolphinese." - Carl Sagan
    • "It is of interest to note that while some dolphins are reported to have learned English, up to fifty words used in correct context, no human being has been reported to have learned dolphinese." - Carl Sagan

      Whereas a dolphin may have received fish from humans to train them to learn English. No human has ever received a large lump sum bonus from a dolphin for a dolphin teaching him dolphinese.

      • No human has ever received a large lump sum bonus from a dolphin for a dolphin teaching him dolphinese.

        Because dolphins have a saying; "Never try to teach a human to speak Dolphin. It only wastes your time and annoys the human."

        Strat

        • No human has ever received a large lump sum bonus from a dolphin for a dolphin teaching him dolphinese.

          Because dolphins have a saying; "Never try to teach a human to speak Dolphin. It only wastes your time and annoys the human."

          Strat

          Dolphins are bastards!

    • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

      Their brains are simultaneously similar and very different from our own. In addition to this, their world, and thus their worldview, is very, very different from ours.
  • Polly want a cracker?
    • I think Mynahs are easier to teach to speak than parrots. I worked at a pet shop that had a Mynah that could talk. It could also imitate a squeaking hamster wheel with unerring fidelity.

  • ..is the word that comes to mind. Or perhaps they're already sentient, but in ways we don't quite understand yet. Who knows?
    • Re:"Presentient" (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Jason Levine ( 196982 ) on Wednesday January 31, 2018 @02:38PM (#56042185) Homepage

      Koko the gorilla learned quite a bit of sign language and is able to communicate quite well. If I recall correctly, she has the mental capacity of a young human (probably around 6 years old). So she'll understand simple, real-world concepts and has a sense of self, but you wouldn't expect her to be able to, say, calculate complex mathematical equations. I have a feeling that a lot of higher intelligence animals (whales, dolphins, octopii, chimps, etc) have this kind of sentience, but we just don't have a decent method of recognizing it since they're not talking a human language to us the way a human child would.

      • Right. Like I said elsewhere on this subject: brains both very similar and very different at the same time, and a totally different worldview being a cetacean, since their world is so different from ours (being land-dwellers).
      • Re:"Presentient" (Score:5, Informative)

        by mark-t ( 151149 ) <markt.nerdflat@com> on Wednesday January 31, 2018 @03:22PM (#56042573) Journal

        Koko the gorilla understood a spoken vocabulary of about 2000 words, being able to express a little over half of them in sign. While this certainly sounds impressive, and in truth is impressive for any non-human, a normal 6-year old will typically be able to express 2500 words or more, and has a total receptive vocabulary of usually no fewer than 20,000 words.

        In terms of vocabulary, Koko was more roughly the equivalent of a 3 or 4 year old human child, not a 6-year old one.

        • Re:"Presentient" (Score:4, Informative)

          by mcswell ( 1102107 ) on Wednesday January 31, 2018 @10:29PM (#56045245)

          Also, a 6 year old kid has a grammar (in English, that includes both morphology--a relatively small amount, as languages go--and recursive syntax), and knows how to use it in both speaking and listening. Koko never had a grammar, and in that respect was no more than a two year old. Also, most six year olds in literate countries are well on their way to learning to read and write, and do arithmetic.

        • by pots ( 5047349 )
          The parent said that she had a mental capacity of six year old human. Not that she had the same vocabulary as a six year old human.

          Setting aside the fact that this is a stupid way of measuring things, one of the characteristics of human brains is our extremely large language processing centers. This is kinda our stand-out feature, mentally. We like to make much ado about "self-awareness" and our large neo-cortexes, and they are big, but dolphins are comparable. It's vocabulary that we do better than any
      • Koko the gorilla learned quite a bit of sign language and is able to communicate quite well.

        This is not a fact and is actually highly disputed. See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

        People think that anybody who can use ASL could simply have a conversation with Koko. This is false. Koko's conversations are with her handler and subject to significant interpretation.

    • And they may be saying the exact same thing about us, but in ways we're not likely to understand for a long long time.

  • Is this real, or the plot to the new movie Day of the Orca?

    • The movie was "ORCA: The Killer Whale". It came out about 6 months after Jaws, and it was awful. Who knew that whales could commit arson?

      Orca - the killer whale, is one of the most intelligent creatures in the universe. Incredibly, he is the only animal other than man who kills for revenge. He has one mate, and if she is harmed by man, he will hunt down that person with a relentless, terrible vengeance - across seas, across time, across all obstacles
  • by Headw1nd ( 829599 ) on Wednesday January 31, 2018 @05:00PM (#56043303)
    So listening to some of the raw data, it seems like the orca frequently uses fart sounds to try and imitate human speech. I can only imagine that this means we sound like fart noises to them.
  • If we (humans) are so much smarter than they are, why is it we keep trying to force them to learn our languages rather than us learning theirs? Just sayin'....
  • Actually someone did it first:
    https://youtu.be/0xUvhUK8Dv8?t... [youtu.be]
    In fact it inspired Ecco the Dolphin game in some way.

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