Some emoji

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JP Hastings-Spital 2024-03-27 18:19:50 +00:00
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date: 2024-03-15T12:34:31.711Z
publishDate: 2024-03-15T12:34:31.711Z
emoji: 🔠
title: Accėnt mārks in E̱nglish
audio: index.mp3
bookmarkOf: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Fok5AQ2WRo

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title: Adventures Raising the Next Generation
date: "2024-03-11T21:05:12Z"
publishDate: "2024-03-07T17:00:00Z"
emoji: 👶
bookmarkOf: https://atlaspragmatica.com/doing-things-differently-adventures-raising-the-next-generation/
references:
bookmark:

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title: Neologisms
date: "2024-03-03T08:57:01Z"
emoji: 🔮
bookmarkOf: https://maggieappleton.com/neologisms
references:
bookmark:

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date: 2024-03-27T17:19:03.676Z
publishDate: 2024-03-27T17:19:03.676Z
title: Wild bird gestures “after you” | The University of Tokyo
emoji: 🐤
title: Physical gestures seen in birds for the first time
bookmarkOf: https://www.u-tokyo.ac.jp/focus/en/press/z0508_00339.html
category:
- ""
references:
https://wwwUTokyoAcJp/focus/en/press/z050800339Html:
url: https://www.u-tokyo.ac.jp/focus/en/press/z0508_00339.html
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publication: The University of Tokyo
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More and more I get the feeling that we, as a species, will be (poorly) debating the rights of non-human sentience from the animal kingdom well before we get near general "AI".
More and more I get the feeling that we, as a species, will be (poorly) debating the rights of non-human sentience from the animal kingdom well before we get anywhere near general "AI".
### Highlights
> A small-bird species, the Japanese tit (Parus minor), uses wing movements as a gesture to convey the message “after you,” according to new research at the University of Tokyo. When a mating pair arrives at their nest box with food, they will wait outside on perches. One will then often flutter its wings toward the other, apparently indicating for the latter to enter first. The researchers say that this discovery challenges the previous belief that gestural communication is prominent only in humans and great apes, significantly advancing our understanding of visual communication in birds.