Editing 1425: Tasks
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The state-of-the-art algorithms for solving this kind of task (as of this comic's publishing) use local features (e.g. {{w|Scale-invariant feature transform|SIFT}} or {{w|Speeded up robust features|SURF}} in combination with a {{w|support vector machine}}) or a {{w|convolutional neural network}}. | The state-of-the-art algorithms for solving this kind of task (as of this comic's publishing) use local features (e.g. {{w|Scale-invariant feature transform|SIFT}} or {{w|Speeded up robust features|SURF}} in combination with a {{w|support vector machine}}) or a {{w|convolutional neural network}}. | ||
β | The subtitle refers to "CS", which is a common | + | The subtitle refers to "CS", which is a common acronym for "{{w|Computer Science}}", of which {{w|artificial intelligence}} and {{w|computer vision}} are sub-disciplines. |
The title text mentions [http://dspace.mit.edu/bitstream/handle/1721.1/6125/AIM-100.pdf The Summer Vision Project] and {{w|Marvin Minsky}} of MIT. In the summer of 1966, he asked his undergraduate student {{w|Gerald Jay Sussman}} to [http://szeliski.org/Book/ "spend the summer linking a camera to a computer and getting the computer to describe what it saw"]. {{w|Seymour Papert}} drafted the plan, and it seems that Sussman was joined by {{w|Bill Gosper}}, {{w|Richard Greenblatt (programmer)|Richard Greenblatt}}, {{w|Leslie Lamport}}, Adolfo Guzman, Michael Speciner, John White, Benjamin, and Henneman - in case the multiple Wikipedia links don't give it away, know that this is sizable cross-section of the AI researchers of the period). The project schedule allocated one summer for the completion of this task. The required time was obviously significantly underestimated, since dozens of research groups around the world are still working on this topic today. | The title text mentions [http://dspace.mit.edu/bitstream/handle/1721.1/6125/AIM-100.pdf The Summer Vision Project] and {{w|Marvin Minsky}} of MIT. In the summer of 1966, he asked his undergraduate student {{w|Gerald Jay Sussman}} to [http://szeliski.org/Book/ "spend the summer linking a camera to a computer and getting the computer to describe what it saw"]. {{w|Seymour Papert}} drafted the plan, and it seems that Sussman was joined by {{w|Bill Gosper}}, {{w|Richard Greenblatt (programmer)|Richard Greenblatt}}, {{w|Leslie Lamport}}, Adolfo Guzman, Michael Speciner, John White, Benjamin, and Henneman - in case the multiple Wikipedia links don't give it away, know that this is sizable cross-section of the AI researchers of the period). The project schedule allocated one summer for the completion of this task. The required time was obviously significantly underestimated, since dozens of research groups around the world are still working on this topic today. |