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The Collaborative Human Interpreter (CHI) is a proposed software interface for human-based computation (first proposed as a programming language on the blog Google Blogoscoped, but implementable via an API in virtually any programming language) specially designed for collecting and making use of human intelligence in a computer program. One typical usage is implementing impossible-to-automate functions. For example, it is currently difficult for a computer to differentiate between images of men, women and non-humans. However, this is easy for people. A programmer using CHI could write a code fragment along these lines: enum GenderCode Photo photo = loadPhoto(file) GenderCode result = checkGender(photo) Code for the function checkGender(Photo p) can currently only approximate a result, but the task can easily be solved by a person. When the function checkGender() is called, the system will send a request to someone, and the person who received the request will process the task and input the result. If the person (task processor) inputs value MALE , you'll get the value in your variable result, in your program. This querying process can be highly automated.== Deployment == On November 6, 2005, Amazon.com launched CHI as its business platform in the Amazon Mechanical Turk (). It's the first business application using CHI. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Collaborative human interpreter」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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