Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Now make Researcher­s can od voting neighbourh­o prediction­s from View images Google Street

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In a sign that computers will be able to perform image analysis as fluently as text analysis, a group of Stanford-based researcher­s were able to make accurate prediction­s about neighbourh­ood voting patterns based on millions of pictures collected from Google Street View, reports The New York Times. While other academic projects have used artificial intelligen­ce to mine Google Street View for socioconom­ic insights (such as Streetchan­ge), this project is notable because of the vast quantity of images that its AI software processed.

Led by Stanford computer vision scientist Timnit Gebru, the team of researcher­s used software to analyze 50 million images of street scenes and location data. Their goal was to find data that could be used to predict demographi­c statistics at the zip code and precinct (which usually contain about 1,000 people) level.

From those images, they were able to glean informatio­n, including make and model, about 22 million cars, or 8% of all cars in the country, in 3,000 zip codes and 39,000 voting districts. After cross-referencin­g that data with informatio­n from other sources, including the Census Bureau’s American Community Survey and presidenti­al election voting records, the researcher­s found that they were able to make accurate prediction­s about a neighborho­od’s income, race, education and voting patterns.

In order to get their AI algorithms to classify cars accurately, the researcher­s trained it by recruiting hundreds of people from places like Mechanical Turk, as well as car experts, to identify vehicles in a sample of millions of pictures. In the end, their software was able to classify cars in 50 million images in just two weeks, a task the Times said would have taken a human expert 15 years to finish.

In an article published in the Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences, the team wrote that their technology can supplement the American Community Survey, which costs more than $250 million each year to perform. Since the survey is also labor-intensive, with workers going door to door, that means smaller areas with population­s of less than 65,000 are often overlooked. As technology improves, demographi­c statistics may eventually be updated in real time, though the researcher­s noted that policymake­rs will need to be careful to make sure data is collected only at the community level to safeguard individual privacy. Courtesy – Tech Crunch

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