Game Web Site Wants Users To compose Smarter Computers
Carnegie Mellon University researchers hope Web surfers will spend their free duration playing Internet-based games to help other people’s and businesses’ computers get smarter.
On Wednesday, the researchers launched http://www.gwap.com with five games designed to help computers with tasks they can’t automatically do.
“There are a lot of things that computers cannot do, but we’d somehow like to get them done,” said Luis von Ahn, an assistant professor of computer science. “So what we’re doing is getting humans to do it for us.”
The tasks include improving computer searches for images or audio clips. For example, whether you search on the Web for “sad songs,” a search engine will generally show you hyperlinks to audio files that have the word sad in the filename. But by getting public to describe audio clips as sad in online games like “Tag a Tune,” researchers can improve searches for audio files.
Users older than 13 are matched with other players
-ESP, in which opposing players are shown a picture and try to guess what words the other player will use to describe the image. The game’s goal is to help improve image searches on the Net by creating descriptions of uncaptioned images. The game has already been licensed by Google as Google Image Labeler.
-Matchin, in which opposing players are shown the two images and asked to choose which one they like best. The more the players choose the same image, the more points they rack up. The goal is to help computers recognize what images public would prefer to see when they are searching for pictures on the Web.
-Squigl, where two players are given a word describing part of an image and must trace what the word is describing. Points are awarded based on how…
Orginal post by Top Tech News
No comments yet. Be the first.
Leave a reply
















