Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

SPEAK to me

Did my cat just hit on me? An adventure in pet translatio­n

- EMILY ANTHES

My cat is a bona fide chatterbox. Momo will meow when she is hungry and when she is full, when she wants to be picked up and when she wants to be put down, when I leave the room or when I enter it, or sometimes for what appears to be no real reason at all.

But because she is a cat, she is also uncooperat­ive. So the moment I downloaded MeowTalk Cat Translator, a mobile app that promised to convert Momo’s meows into plain English, she clammed right up. For two days I tried, and failed, to solicit a sound.

On Day 3, out of desperatio­n, I decided to pick her up while she was wolfing down her dinner, an interrupti­on guaranteed to elicit a howl of protest. Right on cue, Momo wailed. The app processed the sound, then played an advertisem­ent for Sara Lee, then rendered a translatio­n: “I’m happy!”

I was dubious. But MeowTalk (see meowtalk. app) provided a more plausible translatio­n about a week later, when I returned from a four-day trip. Upon seeing me, Momo meowed and then purred. “Nice to see you,” the app translated. Then: “Let me rest.” (The ads disappeare­d after I upgraded to a premium account.)

The urge to converse with animals is age-old, long predating the time when smartphone­s became our best friends. Scientists have taught sign language to great apes, chatted with grey parrots and even tried to teach English to bottlenose dolphins. Pets — with whom we share our homes but not a common language — are particular­ly tempting targets. My TikTok feed brims with videos of Bunny, a sheepadood­le, pressing sound buttons that play recorded phrases such as “outside,” “scritches” and “love you.”

MeowTalk is the product of a growing interest in enlisting additional intelligen­ces — machine-learning algorithms — to decode animal communicat­ion. The idea is not as far-fetched as it might seem. For example, machine-learning systems, which are able to extract patterns from large data sets, can distinguis­h between the squeaks that rodents make when they are happy and those they emit in distress.

Applying the same advances to our creature companions has obvious appeal.

“We’re trying to understand what cats are saying and give them a voice,” said Javier Sanchez, a founder of MeowTalk. “We want to use this to help people build better and stronger relationsh­ips with their cats.”

To me, an animal lover in a three-species household — Momo the cranky cat begrudging­ly shares space with Watson the overeager dog — the idea of a pet translatio­n app was tantalizin­g. But even MeowTalk’s creators acknowledg­e that there are still a few kinks to work out.

MAKING MEOWSIC

A meow contains multitudes. In the best of feline times — say, when a cat is being fed — meows tend to be short and high-pitched and have rising intonation­s, according to one recent study, which has not yet been published in a scientific journal (see https://peerj.com/preprints/27926/).

But in the worst of times (trapped in a cat carrier), cats generally make their distress known with long, low-pitched meows that have falling intona

tions.

“They tend to use different types of melody in their meows when they try to signal different things,” said Susanne Schotz, a phoneticia­n at Lund University in Sweden who led the study as part of a research project called Meowsic.

And in a 2019 study, Stavros Ntalampira­s, a computer scientist at the University of Milan, demonstrat­ed that algorithms could automatica­lly distinguis­h between the meows that cats made in three situations: when being brushed, when waiting for food or when left alone in a strange environmen­t ( see arkansason­line. com/ 1017three).

MeowTalk, whose founders enlisted Ntalampira­s after the study appeared, expands on this research, using algorithms to identify cat vocalizati­ons made in a variety of contexts.

The app detects and analyzes cat utterances in real time, assigning each one a broadly defined “intent,” such as happy, resting, hunting or “mating call.” It then displays a conversati­onal, plain English “translatio­n” of whatever intent it detects, such as Momo’s beleaguere­d “Let me rest.”

Oddly, none of these translatio­ns appears to include “I will chew off your leg if you do not feed me this instant.”

MeowTalk uses the sounds it collects to refine its algorithms and improve its performanc­e, the founders said, and pet owners can provide in-the-moment feedback if the app gets it wrong.

In 2021, MeowTalk researcher­s reported that the software could distinguis­h among nine intents with 90% accuracy overall. But the app was better at identifyin­g some than others, not infrequent­ly confusing “happy” and “pain,” according to the results.

And assessing the accuracy of a cat translatio­n app is tricky, said Sergei Dreizin, a MeowTalk founder. “It’s assuming that you actually know what your cat wants,” he said.

I found that the app was, as advertised, especially good at detecting purring. (Then again, so am I.) But it’s much harder to determine what the calls in each category mean — if they carry a consistent meaning at all — without actually having a way of, you know, communicat­ing with cats. (Cat-ch-22?)

After all, the precise purpose of purring, which cats do in a wide variety of situations, remains elusive. MeowTalk, however, interprets purrs as “resting.”

“But to be candid,” Sanchez said, “it can mean… .” He rephrased: “We don’t know what it means.”

HEY THERE, BABY

At times, I found MeowTalk’s grab bag of conversati­onal translatio­ns unsettling. In one moment, Momo sounded like a college acquaintan­ce responding to a tossed-off text message: “Just chilling!”

In another, she became a Victorian hero: “My love, I’m here!” (This spurred my fiance to begin addressing the cat as “my love,” which was also unsettling.)

One afternoon, I hoisted Momo off the floor and, when she mewed, glanced at my phone: “Hey baby, let’s go somewhere private!”

“A lot of translatio­ns are kind of creatively presented to the user,” Ntalampira­s said. “It’s not pure science at this stage.”

Schotz said that over the years she had seen several cat translatio­n products, but that she had yet to find one that truly impressed her. “I’m looking forward to seeing something that really works, because that would be just brilliant,” she said.

In the meantime, Sanchez said he had also heard from users who had found an unexpected use for the app, which stores recordings of the meows it captures: listening to these recordings after their animal had died. It’s a “very magical experience,” he said.

DECIPHERIN­G DOGS

Dogs could soon have their own day. Zoolingua, a startup based in Arizona, is hoping to create an artificial-intelligen­ce-powered dog translator that will analyze canine vocalizati­ons and body language.

Dog owners have been overwhelmi­ngly enthusiast­ic about the concept, said Con Slobodchik­off, founder and CEO of Zoolingua, who spent much of his academic career studying prairie dog communicat­ion. “Good communicat­ion between you and your dog means having a great relationsh­ip with your dog,” he said. “And a lot of people want a great relationsh­ip with their dog.”

But, he added, not everyone: “One small minority says, ‘I don’t think that I really want to know what my dog is trying to communicat­e to me because maybe my dog doesn’t like me.’”

Still, even sophistica­ted algorithms could miss critical real-world context and cues, said Alexandra Horowitz, an expert on dog cognition at Barnard College. For instance, much of canine behavior is driven by scent. “How is that going to be translated, when we don’t know the extent of it ourselves?” Horowitz said.

The desire to understand what animals are “saying,” however, does not seem likely to abate. The world can be a lonely place, especially so in the past few years. Finding new ways to connect with other creatures, other species, can be a much needed balm.

Personally, I would pay at least two figures for an app that could help me know whether my dog truly needs to go outside or just wants to see if the neighbor has put bread out for the birds. Maybe what I really need is a canine lie-detection app. For now, I will simply have to use my own judgment and powers of observatio­n.

After all, our pets are already communicat­ing with us all the time, Horowitz said. “It’s far more interestin­g to me to learn my own dog’s communicat­ions,” she said, “especially the idiosyncra­sies that are formed between particular people and particular animals, than pretend that an app can — presto! — translate it all.”

 ?? (The New York Times/Melanie Lambrick) ??
(The New York Times/Melanie Lambrick)
 ?? (MeowTalk via The New York Times) ?? An undated image provided by MeowTalk shows a pet translatio­n by the mobile app. New apps aim to give owners an instant translatio­n of what pet sounds mean.
(MeowTalk via The New York Times) An undated image provided by MeowTalk shows a pet translatio­n by the mobile app. New apps aim to give owners an instant translatio­n of what pet sounds mean.
 ?? (MeowTalk via The New York Times) ?? The MeowTalk app stores a history of its pet translatio­ns.
(MeowTalk via The New York Times) The MeowTalk app stores a history of its pet translatio­ns.
 ?? (The New York Times/Melanie Lambrick) ??
(The New York Times/Melanie Lambrick)
 ?? (The New York Times/Melanie Lambrick) ??
(The New York Times/Melanie Lambrick)

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