Have you ever wondered what music might look like? Well these beautiful images are piano notes made visible for the first time thanks to a revolutionary new scientific instrument. The CymaScope uses a ...
When a dolphin clicks and squeaks, it is usually using these high-pitched sounds to "see" its underwater environment. Dolphins, and other toothed whales, use echolocation to help them identify objects ...
A private dolphin communication research organization founded by Jack Kassewitz and his wife, Donna Kassewitz, has released a controversial image that allegedly shows an underwater diver as it would ...
In a world’s first, researchers from the US and UK have created an impression of a submerged human as recorded by a dolphin’s echolocation. To do it, a team led by Jack Kassewitz of SpeakDolphin.com ...
A private dolphin research organization based in Miami sparked a minor sensation last month when it released a controversial image of an underwater diver that was reportedly created using data ...
Acoustics engineer John Stuart Reid and American dolphin researcher Jack Kassewitz are working on a Cymascope, a device that allows dolphin-speak to be converted into graphics on a screen. The ...
For the first time ever, you can see what a dolphin sees. Well, okay, you can’t look through a dolphin’s eyes but you can take a gander at this image that represents how a human looks through a ...
When we think about how to represent sound visually, most of us probably picture those volume-dependent sine waves. But that’s not how John Stuart Reid pictures sound. He’s patented something called a ...
Researchers have turned into images the sounds that dolphins make in water, bringing humans closer to deciphering their language. HT Image The key to this technique is the CymaScope, a new instrument ...
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