Thursday, June 19, 2025
ADVT 
Tech

This computer understands science better than humans

Darpan News Desk IANS, 02 Dec, 2014 12:56 PM
    A computer developed by the University of Wisconsin-Madison (UWM) has proved that it is better than scientists at extracting data from scientific publications and placing it in a database amongst thousands of other results.
     
    “We demonstrated that the system was no worse than people on all the things we measured and it was better in some categories," said Christopher Re, lead researcher from Stanford University.
     
    The machine reading system named “PaleoDeepDive” competed with scientists to manually enter data into the Paleobiology Database.
     
    The database, compiled by hundreds of researchers, is the destination for data from all palaeontology studies.
     
    “PaleoDeepDive” mirrored the human activities needed to assemble the Paleobiology Database.
     
    “We extracted the same data from the same documents and put it into the exact same structure as the human researchers, allowing us to rigorously evaluate the quality of our system and the humans," said Shanan Peters from the UWM.
     
    Compiling the data, “PaleoDeepDive” could extend and improve results quickly as new information was added while humans had to go back to the library and re-examine original documents constantly.
     
    “The development marks a milestone in the quest to rapidly and precisely summarize, collate and index the vast output of scientists around the globe,” Peters added.
     
    "Ultimately, we hope to have the ability to create a computer system that can read a bunch of papers, arrange a bunch of facts and relate them to one another in order to address big questions,” he said.
     
    The results were published in the journal PloS One.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Half of world population to use mobile internet by 2020: GSMA

    Half of world population to use mobile internet by 2020: GSMA
    "It is calculated that there were 2.2 billion mobile internet subscribers in 2013, representing approximately 30 percent of the global population. GSMA...

    Half of world population to use mobile internet by 2020: GSMA

    Social media helps get science work noticed

    Social media helps get science work noticed
    Sharing science work via social media like Twitter is good for researchers in getting their works noticed, shows a study....

    Social media helps get science work noticed

    Bonnet-embedded device to charge your car

    Bonnet-embedded device to charge your car
    A team from Queensland University of Technology (QUT) in Brisbane has developed lightweight “supercapacitors” that can be combined with regular....

    Bonnet-embedded device to charge your car

    Indians capable of building WhatsApp for the world: Official

    Indians capable of building WhatsApp for the world: Official
    Indians have it in their DNA to build the next WhatsApp for the world, a top company official said here Tuesday....

    Indians capable of building WhatsApp for the world: Official

    World's first selfie-taking, wearable drone!

    World's first selfie-taking, wearable drone!
    Brace up for cool flying selfies as researchers have developed what could be the world's first wearable drone that can fly high to take your photographs....

    World's first selfie-taking, wearable drone!

    Sorry, Instagram Users: Ads Coming To Canadian Streams Soon

    Sorry, Instagram Users: Ads Coming To Canadian Streams Soon
    Some users may have already seen a message from Instagram with a head's up that advertisements will soon be displayed in their streams.

    Sorry, Instagram Users: Ads Coming To Canadian Streams Soon