Not a language model, but there was this classifier mapping pig squeals to contextual information about the animal [1].
For human language models there are obvious practical uses and we can intuitively evaluate the quality of the models. For animal communication you need to use other biological variables, like valence in the pig communication example.
I do remember one where they generated artificial frog mating calls and were able to generate artificial ones that were exceptionally attractive to female frogs, but that was from a while back, and I can’t find the link.
There was a post here on HN a few months back about a group of scientists that did exactly that to whale recordings, and actually found some surprising patterns emerge.
jawarner|3 years ago
For human language models there are obvious practical uses and we can intuitively evaluate the quality of the models. For animal communication you need to use other biological variables, like valence in the pig communication example.
I do remember one where they generated artificial frog mating calls and were able to generate artificial ones that were exceptionally attractive to female frogs, but that was from a while back, and I can’t find the link.
[1] https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-022-07174-8
prometheus76|3 years ago
https://medium.com/health-and-biological-research-news/prair...
https://www.npr.org/2011/01/20/132650631/new-language-discov...
Original paper: sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0003347205801174?via%3Dihub
shakezula|3 years ago
edit: I think this is the one I was thinking of: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26874309