WHO
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WHEN
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WHERE
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WHAT
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Mike
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14 July 2019
Clearwater, Florida
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Clearwater Library
100 N. Osceola Ave Clearwater, FL 33755
(727) 562-4970
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Meet the Author
Authors speak with the public about
their books. I will have a PowerPoint video playing about Arielle's speech. Books are for sale and will be signed on request.
Bring questions about an animal
learning language.
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Mike
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27-30 June 2012
Speaking
: Thursday 28 June2012 @ ~2:30 p.m
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5th EASLCE International Conference on
“Natura Loquens: Eruptive Dialogues, Disruptive
Discourses” Tenerife, Canary Islands, Spain
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Convention Paper/Presentation-- "Disrupted Dialogue: A Macaw Learning
Language"
(Communication between bird and man
ruptures due to inattention.)
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Mike
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25-26 August 2012
Speaking
:Saturday 3 p/m. Sunday: 2
p.m.
Click for brochure
about2012
All-American
Hookbill
Fair &
Seminar--Gateway
Parrot
Club
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2012 All-American Hookbill Fair &
Seminar--Gateway Parrot Club Machinists Hall 12365 St. Charles Rock Rd., Bridgeton MO (St. Louis),
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(Saturday)
Beyond … “Polly Wants a
Cracker”™:
Parrots Using Language
(Sunday)
Beyond … “Polly Wants a
Cracker”™:
Humans Limit Interspecies Communication with Parrots
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Mike
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06-09 March 2013
Speaking
: Wednesday 6 March 2013 at 9:00 p.m.
www.comparativecognition.org/conference
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20th Annual Conference of the
Comparative Cognition Society
3101 North Highway A1A Indiatlantic Beach,
Melbourne Florida
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Speech-Language Disparity
Lack of perception for elements of
language ...
"
Passive Speech Research": cognitive speech, use of synonym & pronoun substitution
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Click for more information >
Check for new listings because future additions may
appear, including appearances by Arielle.
Site last update
08 May 2019
Last major update
14 September 2015
Here are the details about the ParrotSpeech Group:
Description
People interested in the study of spontaneous speech by
talking
birds. The topics of concern include learning theory, speech
recognition,
recording speech, cognitive speech by talking birds,
linguistics, conversations with
parrot-like birds, cognition,
consciousness, and other topics related to the talking birds. To
join
click on the button to the left or enter the subscription into your
e-mail
address: ParrotSpeech-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
Information about appearances, presentations, events to
“meet the author” and
attend a book signing for
Another Kind of Mind
: A Talking bird Masters English
To see and hear information about Arielle presented
on a Florida TV show, click on the link below. Look for "Seen on TV." If
segment does not come up, search for "parrot," then select article about "Is
Arielle Talking?" Interview about speech research./cognitive speech clip from WTVT-13 FOX,
Tampa 29 September 2010
See Arielle on TV ... Hear her talking
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Arielle speaks and understands hundreds of English words,
phrases,
and sentences. This capacity is called cognitive speech.
In June 2009, she will be 18 years old. Arielle is a shy
bird, especially around strangers, and as a "free-speaking
talking bird," she speaks
voluntarily. She accompanies me on a daily visit to a park or a walk about the
neighborhood,
and during our outings, she occasionally speaks directly to me.
A form of interspecies communication results when she speaks to me. I call Arielle "an educated
bird" rather
than a trained parrot. The term educated means that she continues to learn
language, and Arielle speaks as a
result of learning things from lessons. She also learns on
her own by associative learning. A speech sample can
be heard by clicking identified sound
selections located near yellow boxes throughout this site; transcription of
Arielle's words
appear in another yellow box near the bottom of the same page. Many speech samples appear
on
the "Another_Mind" page; the transcriptions are in the book
Another Kind of Mind
.
Many people consider macaws to be mediocre talking birds. Arielle might be an exception. She
vocalizes
daily from her gym on the porch; her remarks often contain sequences of invented statements
that express her
thoughts. Listeners initially find her recorded speech difficult to
understand, but after seeing a transcription of
her statements they are startled by the range
of her conversational topics as well as her general comments.
Arielle is learning English at an advanced grade-school
level. Her linguistic abilities include:
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Arielle speaks of her free will and communicates many
different messages.
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Arielle speaks with as many as five (5) different voice
characteristics
.
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Arielle is learning the English language and can make
complicated
statements.
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Arielle asks questions, and she sometimes answers her
own query (ha, ha).
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Arielle identifies other animals as
ants,
butterfly, cat,
dog,
rabbit, and
snake
; her vocabulary to
describ
e
birds
includ
es:
bird, cardinal, crow,
egret,
"feathered friend," hawk,
parrot,
and
stork.
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Arielle
knows
common words that begin with
m
ost
letter
s
of the alphabet, but she
hasn't
needed
to speak
words that begin with
"X"
or
"Z" yet.
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Arielle speaks about many every day
things
and speaks sequences about a single topic.
How many people are interested in parrot speech?
The
counter shows how many new friends Arielle made.
ParrotSpeech.com The home of the pioneering macaw
Arielle
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This site deals with the abilities of one talking bird and
is intended to be a resource
for potential bird owners, anyone interested in speech perception,
people who are
interested in the development of language in nonhumans, and bird keepers who
wish to share information about their talking birds.
For information about my book describing Arielle's
speech,
click here
to transfer to the site page for
Another Kind of Mind
.
Arielle is a friendly Blue & Gold
macaw.
Macaws, like other parrots,
can talk.
She has a large vocabulary and has
spoken more than 4000 different
expressions.
Arielle understands
English. At times she speaks directly
to her human friend.
She freely vocalizes most days. Her
speech contains sequences of
statements about
many topics, and
she carries on conversations with
herself and imagined friends.
She is one of a handful of birds
around the world who can
communicate ideas
through
speech. The author formulated the
idea of listening to her voluntarily
spoken words as a new approach
to interspecies communication.
You are here:
Index Page
CAUTION!
All of the pictures and materials contained on this web
site are the property of the author.
None of the pictures or written material may be used, quoted, or reproduced in any form what so ever
without the
expressed written consent of the author.
© 2003-2019 by Michael Dalton