"Artificial Intelligence" is Vintra's weekly round-up of AI-related articles, blogs, videos, and papers we liked.
The company’s latest work, showcased this month at the CVPR computer vision conference, demonstrates how digital forensics done by humans can be automated by machines in much less time.
Construction workers are killed on the job five times more often than other laborers. Now a new kind of construction worker—a data scientist—aims to use artificial intelligence to predict the likelihood of injury and intervene.
The videos are from tens of thousands of rides of normal drivers. They contain not only high resolution images, but also location and movement measurements to record the cars’ trajectories. In total, the dataset has 100,000 driving videos collected from more than 50,000 rides, covering New York, the San Francisco Bay Area, and other regions.
Recent research in human understanding aims primarily at localizing a sparse set of joints, like the wrists, or elbows of humans. This may suffice for applications like gesture or action recognition, but it delivers a reduced image interpretation. We wanted to go further. Imagine trying new clothes on via a photo, or putting costumes on your friend’s photos. For these tasks, a more complete, surface-based image interpretation is required.
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