A student, as part of a contest, used a machine-learning algorithm and CT scans to analyse on closed scrolls, buried by Mount Vesuvius in October AD 79. The breakthrough could unlock the contents of hundreds of never-before-seen writings.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      241 year ago

      We can see how it makes the translation and verify that it’s making accurate judgements based on the data it’s being fed. We can check the AI against controls too, other scrolls that we know what they say already and feed it data on them until it gets very accurate on those ones. Then apply that model to these unknown scrolls.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        141 year ago

        Note that the AI discussed in the article wasn’t translating anything. It was determining what was written in the original language by using scans of sections of the scroll, taking into account patterns (the “crackle”), differences in texture, etc., that hadn’t been leveraged in this way before.

        Otherwise you’re spot on - it was trained on other similar scans that exhibited those patterns where the written text was already known.

    • @Jimmycakes
      link
      English
      71 year ago

      We already know the language that’s not what they are saying, this is reading the inside the rolled up scroll that’s too fragile to unroll so we don’t know what was in there