Home >Technology peripherals >AI >Student wins $40,000 for using AI to decipher word 'purple' in Herculaneum Scrolls
IT House reported on October 14 that Luke Farritor, a 21-year-old college student and former SpaceX summer intern, used artificial intelligence technology to successfully decipher the Herculaneum Scrolls One of the words won the $40,000 First Letters Prize.
To further their findings and invite other scientists to decode the scrolls, tech entrepreneurs Nat Friedman and Daniel Gross launched the Vesuvius Challenge in March. . The challenge has a total prize pool of up to US$700,000 and encourages participants to use high technology to decipher ancient books such as the Herculaneum Scrolls
The content that needs to be rewritten is: Image source: Nature Magazine
This challenge requires contestants to find at least 10 letters in an area of 4 square centimeters. IT Home Note: The Scrolls of Herculaneum have been unreadable since the volcanic eruption in AD 79, which also buried the nearby ancient city of Pompeii. The breakthrough could reveal hundreds of texts from the only well-preserved library of Greco-Roman antiquity
The content that needs to be rewritten is: Image source: Nature Magazine
Farito developed a machine learning algorithm that detected several lines of Greek letters on the rolled papyrus, including πορjυρας (porphyras), meaning "purple." Farritor uses the nuances of surface texture to train neural networks and highlight ink marks.
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