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[3] [4] Happy Mag noted in particular two other levels: Level 1, a level with industrial architecture, and Level 2, a darkly lit level with long service tunnels, with the original version named Level 0. [4] As new levels were devised in r/backrooms, a faction of fans who preferred the original Backrooms split off from the fandom.
[6] [7] The sperm whale uses echolocation and vocalization with source level as loud as 236 decibels (re 1 μPa m) underwater, [8] [9] the loudest of any animal. [10] It has the largest brain on Earth, more than five times heavier than a human's. Sperm whales can live 70 years or more. [11] [12] [13]
Before extensive research on whale vocalizations was completed, the low-frequency pulses emitted by some species of whales were often not correctly attributed to them. Dr Payne wrote: "Before it was shown that fin whales were the cause [of powerful sounds], no one could take seriously the idea that such regular, loud, low, and relatively pure frequency tones were coming from within the ocean ...
Scientists studying the sperm whales that live around the Caribbean island of Dominica have described for the first time the basic elements of how they might be talking to each other, in an effort ...
Sperm whales, Sharma said, also use a two-level combination of features to form codas, and codas are then sequenced together as the whales communicate. The lower level has similarities to letters ...
Project CETI is an international initiative to understand the acoustic communication of sperm whales using advances in artificial intelligence. [1] [2] The project has an interdisciplinary scientific board including marine biologists, artificial intelligence researchers, roboticists, theoretical computer scientists, and linguists.
Researchers of chatty creatures like bats, bees, songbirds and whales gather many hours of sound or video recordings and then plug that data into AI language models, the way we might with tools ...
A sperm whale may contain as much as 1,900 L (420 imp gal; 500 US gal) of this oil. [ 3 ] The morphology of the nasal complex is believed to be homologous in all of the echolocating Odontoceti (toothed whales), with the spermaceti organ homologous to the dorsal bursa in the dolphin . [ 4 ]