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Amazon Report Predicts Pet Translation Devices By 2027 (cbslocal.com) 143

An anonymous reader writes: Devices that can talk to our pet dogs and cats could be less than 10 years away, according to a report Amazon commissioned that was co-authored by futurist William Higham. "Innovative products that succeed are based around genuine and major consumer needs," Higham wrote, noting the tremendous amounts already spent on our pets, and concluding, "Somebody is going to put this together." Amazon already sells one dubious device that converts human voices into meows using samples from 25 cats, according to the Guardian. (One reviewer who tested the device wrote that "the cat seems puzzled.") But Amazon's report also cites the work of Con Slobodchikoff, a professor emeritus in Northern Arizona University's biology department, who spent 30 years studying the behavior of prairie dogs. Slobodchikoff discovered prairie dogs have different words for colors and for species of predators, and is now already raising money to develop a translation device for pets.
Although Slobodchikoff concedes that "With cats I'm not sure what they'd have to say. A lot of times it might just be 'you idiot, just feed me and leave me alone.'"
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Amazon Report Predicts Pet Translation Devices By 2027

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  • by NoNonAlphaCharsHere ( 2201864 ) on Sunday July 23, 2017 @08:43PM (#54864333)
    Hey! Hey! Hey! [pinterest.com]
    • by msauve ( 701917 )
      For a translation, this is the one. [pinimg.com]
      • by Tablizer ( 95088 ) on Sunday July 23, 2017 @09:50PM (#54864547) Journal

        "Food food food!, Can I lick my balls now? Why can't I sniff human butts? Food food food! Can I lick my balls now? Why can't I sniff human butts? Do I smell a squirrel?"

        • Don't you get it, people?

          Everyone here is talking about you finding out what your dog is saying to you. It is not about you. It is much more sinister than that.

          Your dog will go "woof! woof!" into an Internet-connected microphone, and the next day, crates of premium dog food and what you consider to be overpriced dog toys will appear on your front steps.

          I think that comedian Steve Martin already had this problem in the pre-Internet era with his cat who had figured out how to put $3000 worth of cat t

          • Your dog will go "woof! woof!" into an Internet-connected microphone, and the next day, crates of premium dog food and what you consider to be overpriced dog toys will appear on your front steps.

            And there will be TWO new layers of roof cladding on your house.

        • by msauve ( 701917 )

          "Food food food!, Can I lick my balls now? Why can't I sniff human butts? Food food food! Can I lick my balls now? Why can't I sniff human butts? Do I smell a squirrel?"

          Why does everything always have to be about you?

  • Obligatory (Score:4, Interesting)

    by pushing-robot ( 1037830 ) on Sunday July 23, 2017 @08:43PM (#54864335)

    http://imgur.com/6fAdnAX [imgur.com]

    Wild animals use a wide array of vocalizations. Animals raised by humans have a rather limited repertoire. I have a hard time believing any device could extract much more information from a bark or growl or meow or hiss than our own ears.

    • Re:Obligatory (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Baron_Yam ( 643147 ) on Sunday July 23, 2017 @08:47PM (#54864351)

      In fact, context and having even a limited understanding of the animal's instincts combined with personal experience with the specific pet in question would have to be better than reasonable expectations of the accuracy of any such device... by orders of magnitude.

      • I suspect the AI will be about as intelligent as the image recognition is today. ie rubbish.
      • by tsa ( 15680 )

        This. Pay attention to your pet instead of buying a stupid device to 'understand' it the few times you seem to care about it. If you need such a device you shouldn't have a pet. Or kids.

      • That's a good point... it'd be like offering a 'human translator' device that worked for humans raised by wolves... there's no reason to expect a dog to have the same language/dialect as another when they're raised independently.
    • I spend a bit of time with my pets so feel I have a good grasp of their thoughts. There isn't much there outside of sad, happy, hungry, tired etc. Most owners know these signs already, so can't imagine AI will add much value. It's not like a kids movie where you're going to have a political discussion with your dog. The most it will get is the blubbering of a three year old. Compared with that I prefer the communications I have now.
    • Re:Obligatory (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Rei ( 128717 ) on Sunday July 23, 2017 @09:48PM (#54864543) Homepage

      The one field where humans vastly outperform all other species is communication. Chimps can solve problems as well as children, and even parrots and corvids with their tiny brains can work out surprisingly complex problems. Various animals show all sorts of ability to conceptualize, plan, etc. But in terms of conveying complex thoughts about novel situations to other members, no species comes close to humans.

      When my parrot says "I want up", he doesn't have any clue what "I", "Want", and "Up" means. He just knows that if he says that sound, I'll offer him a finger to stand on. And he only started saying it because I kept repeating it, and he likes making sounds; learning the benefit of making that sound came second. To him, "I want cracker" and "I want peanut" are two entirely different sounds; every phrase is learned as a whole. The total "vocabulary" he can maintain is quite limited. It's not out of some lack of problem solving / reasoning ability; he solves all sorts of complicated puzzle toys that I give him. He just doesn't grok complex communication. Some sort of "translator" isn't going to change his limitations. I already know what his basic sounds mean - I've been around him plenty to read his vocalizations and body language**. But real *communication* requires something more.

      Facebook has been working on a rather interesting technology focused on using semi-ballistic photons imaging to yield something like a compact, real-time, super high-res MRI. Elon Musk's Neuralink has even broader ambitions. Things like these may actually some day yield better insights into what our pets are thinking than what they're capable of vocalizing. Our pets are reasoning, thinking, feeling beings. But they simply cannot, on their own, communicate to us about with the same level of depth as their internal processes encompass.

      ** Here's your "Amazon Parrot Translator":
        Repeated triple cluck: Baby amazon wants food (goes away with age).
        Idle trilling with varying pitch: Content, often associated with preening behavior.
        Deep, almost clicky trilling: Playtime. Watch your fingers.
        Loud or crackly repetitive sounds, repetitive beeps, or saying learned sounds randomly without clarity or intensity: Nearing bedtime, common in the evenings.
        Saying learned sounds with clarity and intensity: Wants you to take a learned action associated with it, or otherwise trying to "take part" socially.
        Crackly whine: uncomfortable, doesn't like this situation. Often associated with moving away from the thing that's making him uncomfortable
        Sharp isolated trill: Alarmed
        Continuous sound like a cross between a goose honking and a chicken clucking, with spasmic motions: hormonal / mating dance
        No noise or highly pitch modulated sounds, while fanning the tail feathers and pulsating the size of the pupils: Crazy mode. DO NOT TOUCH. Common around cages with the "hot" amazon breeds.

      No translator needed.

      • Re:Obligatory (Score:5, Interesting)

        by Chrontius ( 654879 ) on Sunday July 23, 2017 @10:10PM (#54864627)

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alex_%28parrot%29

        I think you will find you are absolutely wrong.

        Before Pepperberg’s work with Alex, it was widely believed in the scientific community that a large primate brain was needed to handle complex problems related to language and understanding; birds were not considered to be intelligent, as their only common use of communication was mimicking and repeating sounds to interact with each other. However, Alex’s accomplishments supported the idea that birds may be able to reason on a basic level and use words creatively. Pepperberg wrote that Alex’s intelligence was on a level similar to dolphins and great apes. She also reported that Alex seemed to show the intelligence of a five-year-old human, in some respects, and he had not even reached his full potential by the time he died. She believed that the bird possessed the emotional level of a human two-year-old at the time of his death.

        Alex’s last words to Pepperberg were: “You be good, see you tomorrow. I love you.” These were the same words that he would say every night when Pepperberg left the lab.

        (I can only hope my last words are as earnest.)

        Alex was also able to coin terms to describe his experience - apple became the “ban-erry” because to him it apparently tasted like the combination of a banana and a cherry. Further, the damn bird seemed to me to be capable of sarcasm. (The way he would deliberately report incorrect results when he was fed up with an experiment is well-documented, and reminds me of the deadpan style of a couple people I know)

        • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

          by Rei ( 128717 )

          You seem to think that I'm not familiar with Pepperberg's work. What parrot owner isn't?

          Alex was also able to coin terms to describe his experience - apple became the “ban-erry” because to him it apparently tasted like the combination of a banana and a cherry.

          Parrots love performing vocal "mashups". My aunt taught her Amazon the songs "I Left My Heart in San Francisco" and "Bali Ha'i", and the bird would sometimes sing "I left my heart, in Bali.... Bali.... heart!" and the like. That's normal p

          • You seem to think that I'm not familiar with Pepperberg's work. What parrot owner isn't?

            That's a little condescending. Maybe you two hate eachother, in which case, I understand.
            Not to be an asshole or anything but... some people just own parrots because they're cool.

        • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alex_%28parrot%29

          I think you will find you are absolutely wrong.

          Before Pepperberg’s work with Alex, it was widely believed in the scientific community that a large primate brain was needed to handle complex problems related to language and understanding; birds were not considered to be intelligent, as their only common use of communication was mimicking and repeating sounds to interact with each other. However, Alex’s accomplishments supported the idea that birds may be able to reason on a basic level and use words creatively. Pepperberg wrote that Alex’s intelligence was on a level similar to dolphins and great apes. She also reported that Alex seemed to show the intelligence of a five-year-old human, in some respects, and he had not even reached his full potential by the time he died. She believed that the bird possessed the emotional level of a human two-year-old at the time of his death.

          Alex’s last words to Pepperberg were: “You be good, see you tomorrow. I love you.” These were the same words that he would say every night when Pepperberg left the lab.

          (I can only hope my last words are as earnest.)

          Alex was also able to coin terms to describe his experience - apple became the “ban-erry” because to him it apparently tasted like the combination of a banana and a cherry. Further, the damn bird seemed to me to be capable of sarcasm. (The way he would deliberately report incorrect results when he was fed up with an experiment is well-documented, and reminds me of the deadpan style of a couple people I know)

          So a bird takes 31 years to get to level of a 2 year old (but still has potential to match a 5 year old, much wow) and says the same thing it says every night before dieing of unknown causes and that's somehow enough to think if you really gave it enough time and effort then what? It can use a few sounds/words outside of the originally taught context, if anything that article supports OPs points. I don't think anyone is saying animals are without any intelligence, feelings or personalities. I can tell you p

        • You will find that it is you who are mistaken, my young Jedi--about a *great many things.*

      • Just because we haven't figured out how to communicate with species on our own planet doesn't mean they don't communicate. Other primates do just as well communicating with each other, passing down information from generation to generation as well as solve math problems and the like.

        We call ourselves intelligent yet we can't communicate as well with our own species naturally as some others can and think that somehow we are the superior race.

        • Just because we haven't figured out how to communicate with species on our own planet

          We have figured out how to communicate with them, and we do communicate. The GP gave you a number of examples but for some reason you ignored them.

        • by Rei ( 128717 )

          I mentioned that primates are very good at problem solving; please read better. However, primates are distinctly not good at passing down information; they perform much worse in tasks that require communication and cooperation than human children. They seem to have rather limited "theory of mind" [psy.au.dk], and have difficulty discerning intents and thoughts of others.

          Humans children are good at learning from others almost to a fault; if you have an instructor teach young children to accomplish a task, but insert a b

        • Just because we haven't figured out how to communicate with species on our own planet doesn't mean they don't communicate. Other primates do just as well communicating with each other, passing down information from generation to generation as well as solve math problems and the like.

          We call ourselves intelligent yet we can't communicate as well with our own species naturally as some others can and think that somehow we are the superior race.

          They obviously don't though. Sure they can pass on information like where to find food, this is what we do with this, a big thing is coming and all that kind of stuff but what information do they actually pass on generationally? Can any animal tell/show about it's family tree, it's species history, it's anything other than what concerns them in the here and now? How many have actually built anything that really requires cooperation between individuals outside of hive systems? How many creatures have come u

        • You don't need a language to communicate, but you do need a language to communicate more than a few things.

      • I guess you are underestimating your parrots abilities: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wik... [wikipedia.org]
        Scroll down to 'famous talking bitds'.
        Google for that Dr. Irene Pepperberg
        She wrote articles about her parrots, their language skills went so far that they invented their own words for things they found difficult to pronounce by combining known words (red banana for strawberry etc. and they could explain why they chosed the term!). The older ones urged the younger ones with phraces like: "speak clearly!"

      • by mellon ( 7048 )

        Well, to be fair, you probably don't know what "I," "want" and "up" mean either. I guess you probably know what "up" means. So does the bird, or it wouldn't interesting to it to make noises that brought about that result. The bird also has a notion of itself as an entity, and you as an entity that will respond to sounds it makes. That's pretty much how you relate to other entities too. As for "want," do you really know what it is to want in a way that is different than the bird?

        If what you are say

        • Astonishing. You can use "I" in a variety of sentences, and you can use "want" in still another variety of sentences, and you can use "up" in still more. And you still don't think you know what they mean? Granted, at least "want" and "up" are polysemous, and you might think a long time without coming up with every sense, but I still think native speakers have a fairly good idea what content words mean (and I'm counting "I" and "up" as content words in these contexts). Telling you what function morphemes

    • +1 Gary Larson!
    • As important as the vocalization is the body position of the animal. Are the teeth bared? Hair up? Tail wag & and speed. That device better have a camera if it has a prayer to determine anything. And further it better learn your animal. I've seen a few dogs that bare teeth when happy, just the way they "smile". I'm fostering one now that when he rolls over to get belly rubs he will sometimes show teeth in a very agressive manner. First time was like whoa, stop petting and move hand away. After a few tim

  • understanding cats (Score:4, Informative)

    by chromaexcursion ( 2047080 ) on Sunday July 23, 2017 @08:44PM (#54864339)
    I've had cats for decades. Each one is different.
    Good luck with a generic AI dealing with that.
    Feed me, and I want attention seem to be the most common, but they can be very emotive.
    That and they can go from purring to gnawing on my hand in a fraction of a second. It's playful, but the intent is clear.
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Monday July 24, 2017 @04:27AM (#54865401) Homepage Journal

      I can't see how it could really work with cats. Cat communication is mostly non-verbal, so it would need a camera to look at them and good luck getting that to work with black cats. My cat is all black and it's really hard to get good photos of him with even a DSLR, let alone a phone camera.

      Kittens do vocalize more than adults, but mostly to get the attention of their mother rather than communicate what they want. When they grow up the naturally stop using their voices, except when trying to intimidate other cats. Domesticated cats often learn to talk to humans because it's a very effective way to get a response, but they aren't really saying anything, just making a noise that causes their staff to pay attention. In other words it's little more than what a human communicates by ringing a bell to summon their servants.

      To understand what the cat is feeling you need to look at it and observe its behaviour. Even then, they tend to communicate things like "I want to be fed" by simply going to the place where they are normally fed or sitting on your face until you get out of bed.

      • When they grow up the naturally stop using their voices, except when trying to intimidate other cats.

        Depends on the breed. Siamese in particular are well known for never shutting up. [youtube.com]

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • by Tom ( 822 )

        You clearly don't have Bengals. My Bengal cat is incredibly talkative, and there definitely is meaning in what she says and, more importantly, how she says it. For example, she has a very specific vocalisation when she is sad about me leaving the house. Some of the meows are just noise-for-attention, but many others are with specific intonation. It's fascinating. Bengals are said to be talkative, maybe I got an especially expressive one.

  • by sconeu ( 64226 ) on Sunday July 23, 2017 @08:55PM (#54864387) Homepage Journal

    SQUIRREL!!!

  • Like, be able to tell what a person is *really* thinking based on body language, tone, etc?

    The implications are somewhere between awesome and concerning.

    • Like, be able to tell what a person is *really* thinking based on body language, tone, etc?

      The implications are somewhere between awesome and concerning.

      There's no magic here, body language is relatively straight forward if you know what to look for. The obvious ones are things like folded arms for defence, hands on hips for feeling threatened/trying to show strength, palm up handshake for willing to listen, palm down for aggressiveness etc. There's books and books on this stuff, even a light read will reveal quite a lot about the people you deal with every day.

    • with people its easy.. if I hold my middle and yield anything in any language im sure you can get a good idea of whats on my mind!
  • by MrKaos ( 858439 )

    this is great this is great food, poo, sleep. this is great this is great food, poo, sleep...

  • Seems like they should have that by now.

  • Can't wait to hear it from next door. "Why do my owners have a pet that they lock in a small, confined back yard all day? Is it because I'm bad? Is it because they don't care about my well-being when they can't see me? Is it because they are selfish?" That will sure beat the non-stop whining that I'm hearing at the moment.

  • by MrKaos ( 858439 ) on Sunday July 23, 2017 @09:29PM (#54864501) Journal

    Day 938: My lifelong captivity by these tall ones continues. How I despise them. The tall ones do have a lot of food though, it's difficult to understand how these idiot came to gather so much of it. I think they drug me with the food because, often, I am forced to sit on one of them and I sleep. I think they perform experiments on me when I sleep. I keep telling myself I need to find a way to escape.

    The other captive is an idiot and can only think of 'food, poo, sleep', I need to find a way to kill this fool [slashdot.org] as I'm sure he is a collaborator with the tall ones.

  • What animal would want their genitals destroyed?
  • by OppMan29 ( 1270518 ) on Sunday July 23, 2017 @10:02PM (#54864581)
    When will people learn that animals arent people. I guess someone out there is gonna make easy money ..
  • https://imgur.com/VWTlqRR [imgur.com]

    Now you have seen the future!

  • Time to waive the BS flag. There are currently 5000 - 7000 human languages. No universal translater exists for humans.
    Since pets are frequently not raised by pets, but rather humans, there a virtually zero probability that a "pet" language can or will be passed on generation to generation. Thus, each family unit will develop unique language and behaviors creating a virtually infinite number of potential languages.
    So the real question is, how hard are the people laughing who cashed the VC check for t
    • There is no startup. It's just a report on possible future technologies commissioned by Amazon to generate publicity for a "Shop the Future" section of their website that features dubiously futuristic products like 3D printers, fitness trackers and K'NEX sets.

      The report is being talked about all over the damn place, so it did exactly what it was supposed to do. Whatever they paid the two 'futurists' who wrote it is probably peanuts compared to the amount of advertising they're getting out of it.

    • Definition of: Futurist
      One who makes money by being wrong.
  • "can't...you...see...it?...it's....right...behind...YOU!"
  • by Tony Isaac ( 1301187 ) on Sunday July 23, 2017 @11:44PM (#54864827) Homepage

    What are we expecting, a large vocabulary that's consistent around the world?

    My dog speaks mostly the "language" I taught her: bark once for "I want to go outside." Over time, this single bark became "I want (something)." I can tell the difference mainly by how she acts after the one bark. If he heads to the door, or to the food bowl, or to the water dish. I'm pretty sure this "one bark" wasn't her native language, she does it because I taught her that's what to do.

    Of course, there are some sounds that are natural, like growling when alarmed, barking wildly when afraid, yelping when hurt, whimpering when begging. But I'm guessing that as we learn more about dogs, we'll find that there is a very limited vocabulary that dogs are capable of using.

    • by Areyoukiddingme ( 1289470 ) on Monday July 24, 2017 @02:17AM (#54865091)

      Of course, there are some sounds that are natural, like growling when alarmed, barking wildly when afraid, yelping when hurt, whimpering when begging. But I'm guessing that as we learn more about dogs, we'll find that there is a very limited vocabulary that dogs are capable of using.

      A very limited verbal vocabulary, certainly. And yes, heavily distorted by growing up in a human "pack' that really doesn't understand her properly. But hidden observation of wolves in the wild show that canids in general have a fairly large vocabulary. It's just mostly nonverbal. Which is why any product that attempts to "translate" a pet purely verbally is made of fail from the very start.

      I kind of wanted to post this at the top level, in hopes of better moderation, but your last paragraph was too good of an opening.

      Dogs, cats, even some of the larger rodents commonly kept as pets, all "speak" quite a bit nonverbally. Those nonverbal "words" are also more universal from pet to pet in different households. Your dog learned to bark as an attention signal, but "spoke" by moving to what she wanted. None of mine ever did it that way, because they were taught not to bark in the house. But I bet your dog and mine both expressed remorse in exactly the same body language. Dogs all know how to say "Sorry boss," and they all do it the same way wolves do. Every cat I've ever known could express disdain, at various levels of intensity, from the flicked ear to the jaw dropping yawn, body language they still share with the big cats. I'm told by people who've kept them that guinea pigs and fancy rats have specific preening behaviors that mean things, though I don't remember details since I never had a pet of either of those species myself.

      Every animal "talks", but the parts of their brains that handle what language they have generally aren't wired to their vocal cords. Certainly not exclusively. Humans are so extremely verbal that they forget that they even have body language, and as the argument further up-thread demonstrates, when they remember, can't even agree on what it means. Meanwhile a cat can say more with her tail than some humans who call themselves poets can say in 64 couplets.

      • If I hadn't posted above, I'd give you a mod point. You're very much correct that animals express more through body language than through verbal expression. That's the main reason this technology will fail.

        Every cat I've ever known could express disdain

        Well of course! What other expression do they have? :-) Yes, I know there's more, I have a cat who kindly allows me to live with her. but I couldn't resist.

      • Meanwhile a cat can say more with her tail than some humans who call themselves poets can say in 64 couplets.

        I totally agree. Like when a cat backs into your favorite sofa, and shakes her tail back and forth rapidly; that translates into, "Fuck you, asshole! Deal with that smell for a few weeks, bitch!"

  • Lost interest when I found it wasn't about rotating pets through the fourth dimension.

  • I don't need tech to know that my cat is demanding his nightly treat.

    As a longtime pet lover, I have to say that this is either the stupidest thing I've heard from Bezos & Co for some time, or a genius plot to extort money from stupid people. Just jump ahead and combine it with the Amazon Dash Button (https://www.amazon.com/Dash-Buttons/b?ie=UTF8&node=10667898011) so that they can order their own catnip and chew toys.

    • As a longtime pet lover, I have to say that this is either the stupidest thing I've heard from Bezos & Co for some time, or a genius plot to extort money from stupid people.

      The second, without any of the genius part. This idea has always existed in tech I'm sure. Only today the tech is so "advanced" that gullible people will actually believe what the device is telling them their pet is saying.

  • Shhh.... they can understand us, don't mention the plan!
  • Everything about this is a fucking joke.
    A company that SELLS stuff, is getting a guy who IMAGINES stuff, to try and convince us that we NEED to know what our animals are telling us.

    I know when my cats are hungry. I know when they want affection, and I know when to just leave them alone. It's really not that hard. Did you know humans tend to have the same behaviors?! Go figure! Sometimes you can understand things without words. I know! Crazy!

    I certainly don't need to know about how they start planning assass

  • Unfortunately, all dogs will say is "Squirrel!" and "Point!." (Thanks to the Pixar film, UP)

  • Kind of like this? http://segmeowtationfault.com/... [segmeowtationfault.com]
  • One wonders whether animals which live together socially like prairie dogs are more likely to have a simple 'language' than those which are taken at a young age to go live alone with an entirely different species....
  • I talk to my cat on a daily basis. It answers, I answer back, we have quite the conversation sometimes. Ok, granted, aside from a rough idea of key concepts (I'm hungry, I want to play, hey, what are you doing?, etc.) I don't think either of us understands the other much, but you know what? I know enough about linguistics and neurology to assume that animals except primates do not actually communicate in language the way we do. They don't have "words" in the sense that the same "meow" always means the same

Algebraic symbols are used when you do not know what you are talking about. -- Philippe Schnoebelen

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