Could this be the beginning of getting a computer to communicate with a bird in 
its own bird-language? I am referring to an earlier discussion where I figured 
it may be easier for a computer, not a human, to communicate in a less complex 
animal language rather than human language with NLP using phonemes. Ben's 
observation about the problem of the communication being very situational and 
highly dependent on the environment seems valid, but this experiment shows me 
that when they add listening to sounds to complete the communication loop, 
maybe there is potential to get this system to talk Bird, but hopefully not 
Bird gibberish.
> Interesting read on an application of neural nets..
> 
> http://www.newscientist.com/news/news.jsp?id=ns99993240
> 
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