App helping Dalhousie researchers understand birds4 hours agoDuration 2:464 hours agoNewsDuration 2:46Cluckify is cracking the code of what birds have to say. Associate professor Suresh Neethirajan with the university’s computer science faculty explains to Amy Smith how it works.Related Stories Canada slowest to report avian flu samples to global database, UBC researchers find ‘A pretty incredible moment’: Grad student shares what it’s like spotting rare birds in Windsor-Essex Researchers share lessons on science, friendship on Nova Scotia’s wild Sable Island UNB scientist checks in from first all-Canadian Antarctic mission P.E.I. wildlife groups boost number of trail cams tracking animals — including elusive river ottersMore from NewsVideo2:22 Students in Raymond, Alta., fundraising for trip to robotics competition in TexasCBC News: Calgary at 6:00 2 minutes agoVideo1:15Yukon’s returning election officer talks about voter turnout in advance of Canada’s election3 minutes agoVideo1:18Yukon party leaders react to latest round of U.S. tariffs3 minutes agoVideo0:47Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami looks for communities to make a pitch for proposed university’s main campus3 minutes agoVideo1:57Nintendo’s Switch 2 promises bigger, better — and pricier 15 minutes agoTrending NowVideo2:44What Canadians need to know before travelling to the U.S.April 1Video12:49Is Trump right about Canada charging 250% dairy tariffs? | About That8 hours agoVideo1:16Inside a Hamilton rental property where it took 1 year to evict tenantMarch 31Video2:00Trump says tariffs will be ‘very kind’The National April 1Video2:47Democrats launch tariff fight ahead of ‘Liberation Day’The National April 2
App helping Dalhousie researchers understand birds
