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Google Image Labeler as an example of bionic software

Google Image Labeler is like a game. The user enters the site and makes a choice: to authorize or participate in the game anonymously. After that, the person is paired up with another equally random user who has just visited the site. The partners are given 90 seconds, during which the system shows them the same set of images from the Google Images search index. Each pair must specify as many subject tags for the image as possible. If at least one of the tags is the same for both participants, then they receive incentive points and go to the next image.

The game is pretty exciting. During the display of the image in the upper left corner, the timer ticks for 90 seconds. A counter is working from above, which shows in real time how many tags your partner has already issued while you are thinking. Alternatively, you can click the “Skip” button, so that the partner will immediately receive a message about this. If he confirms, the following image is immediately displayed to both participants.

After one and a half minutes, all pictures appear on the screen with links to the corresponding web pages, as well as the total points scored by the participant. For each matched tag participant receives 100 points, and the overall rating of all players is updated in the upper right corner of the screen. There are listed the best for today and for all time. The leader of the ranking JoeBob has scored 1.444.600 points, that is, he entered the correct descriptions for 14.446 pictures.

Well-known expert in the field of web technologies Tim O'Reilly wrote in his blog that this group game can be called an example of bionic software . Tim O'Reilly is known as the author of the popular term “Web 2.0”, so the new definition of “bionic software” may soon go to the masses.
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As is known, bionics is an applied science about the application of principles, properties, functions and structures of living nature in technical devices and systems. Here are some results of using bionics : the Eiffel Tower, the geometry of which copies the bone structure of the human femoral head; Velcro closures, the structure of which copies the hooks on the fruit of the weed of the weft; heavy-duty material Kevlar, artificial analogue of a silk web.

Tim O'Reilly believes that the Google Image Labeler program is also based on the principles of bionics, because the system uses human labor as a cheap replacement for artificial intelligence technologies. In other words, wildlife becomes an integrated part of a computer program. This is a sign of bionics, the use of which is very suitable for Web 2.0 applications. Tim O'Reilly speaks of the appearance on the Internet of a whole class of bionic software , which includes the Amazon Mechanical Turk system , mycroft , and the pioneer in this area Distributed Proofreaders .

Source: https://habr.com/ru/post/4359/


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