The Animal Translator
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About this listen
Talking, singing, even dancing — they all trace back to a rare superpower: vocal learning. But humans aren’t the only animals that have it. Neuroscientist Erich Jarvis has spent his career decoding the mysterious ability to imitate sounds, a key ingredient in spoken language. In this episode, he joins Hakeem to explore why only a handful of species — like parrots, dolphins, and bats — can do it, how it evolved, and what it reveals about the brain, consciousness, and culture. Plus, Erich shares how AI is helping decode animal communication and why engineering our pets to talk might actually be possible… but could fundamentally change the way they think.
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Guest Bio:
Erich Jarvis is a neuroscientist investigating the mysteries of speech and vocal learning through groundbreaking research on birdsong and brain evolution. As a professor at The Rockefeller University and head of the Jarvis Lab, he explores how complex behaviors like human language arise from brain circuits and genetic pathways. Jarvis was also profiled in NOVA Wonders: What are Animals Saying.
Timestamps
(00:00:00) Language in Animals vs. Humans
(00:10:37) Music and Vocal Learning
(00:20:15) Can You Genetically Engineer Animals to Speak?
(00:27:48) How Did Speech Evolve?
(00:36:09) Can We Translate Animal Language?
(00:42:27) Brain Size and Speech
(00:48:14) Writing & Symbolic Communication
(00:57:00) Conclusion
(01:04:02) Credits