Computer Equal to or Better than Humans at Cataloging Science

In 1997, IBM’s Deep Blue computer beat chess wizard Garry Kasparov. This year, a computer system developed at the University of Wisconsin-Madison equaled or bested scientists at the complex task of extracting data from scientific publications and placing it in a database that catalogs the results of tens of thousands of individual studies.

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“We demonstrated that the system was no worse than people on all the things we measured, and it was better in some categories,” says Christopher Ré, who guided the software development for a project while a UW professor of computer sciences.

The development, described in the current issue of PLoS, marks a milestone in the quest to rapidly and precisely summarize, collate and index the vast output of scientists around the globe, says first author Shanan Peters, a professor of geoscience at UW-Madison.

Peters and colleagues set up the faceoff between PaleoDeepDive, their new machine reading system, and the human scientists who had manually entered data into the Paleobiology Database. This repository, compiled by hundreds of researchers, is the destination for data from paleontology studies funded by the National Science Foundation and other agencies internationally.

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