• @CaptainSpaceman
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    405 months ago

    Based on the methods, seems a stretch to say this isnt correlation alone

    • @givesomefucks
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      175 months ago

      Yeah, just the wording of the title is a huge red flag.

      I’m curious if “faces” are really just faces or shoulders up where hairstyles and clothes give clues.

      Like, an a adult that goes by Bob, Bobby, or Robert looks different. And people would subconsciously account for age and what names were popular.

      A lot of shit goes on behind the scenes and sometimes the conscious brain doesn’t know and makes up it’s own reason for why it decided something.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      5 months ago

      I don’t care which way the causation goes or whether it comes from the name choice and preferences of the parents (yea, bad title), what surprised me is that ML can predict a name based on a face at all, there should be no correlation in first place.

      • @Windex007
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        195 months ago

        I disagree. Age biases the statistical likelihood of a name. Features that hint in any ethnic direction. Also some visible features might bias towards urban vs rural upbringing which also would also lean names in another direction.

        • @[email protected]OP
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          5 months ago

          Oh yea, baby name trends, ethnicity, I don’t know how heterogeneous the datasets they are using are when they mention the strength of the correlation, I was imagining it would distinguish a John from a Peter, but there could be a much lower correlation in that subset.