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This raises a point for me...
I have often taken a photograph of “the thing”, framed nicely and hopefully with enough diagnostic details to ID (photo 1). I then might provide additional photos with much better diagnostic angles (photos 2 thru n-1). The last photo I put up will often be a “context” photo, showing where the thing sits in the environment (photo n). Photo 1 always, diagnostics sometimes, context occasionally.
I often see other observations where there is a context shot, and in the description one of the plants, for example, gets singled out as subject. Often it is not centre of frame either. Would it be fair to suggest that if it is the only photo, it could well be “untraining the AI”? If so, is there a way we can flag such photos/observations as “don’t use for AI training”?
cheers
Mark Tutty
kiwif...@gmail.com
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In reading the background to the implementation of the AI, it strikes me that one of the big goals was to ease the burden on the identifiers as the volume increases. I have seen it over the last 3 years, I was commenting to someone the other day about how when I joined 3 years ago, there would be a dozen or so observations a day and up to a hundred on weekends. I came back from a weekday trip where there was no internet, and after two days I had 270+ observations to review. This is in NZ where we are on a regionalised portal!
If the point is to reduce the burden on the identifiers, then getting an observation to the right identifier as quickly as possible is key, while shielding them from the observations that aren’t their area. I became involved as an identifier, not because I am an expert in any area, but I felt I could help by handling many of the everyday easy stuff, saving the time of the experts to focus on the difficult ones.
I see the AI doing that same role, just on steroids. It aint gonna get em all right, anymore than I ever was! But what it will do is get the majority to the right identifiers quickly, and those identifiers will usually know who to tag if it’s not their area.
Here in NZ, we get so many spiders being suggested as northern hemisphere ones, but that’s ok, because as a subscriber to aranae, I know they aren’t and can flick em back up the tree to aranae. If the observer is not back on to change their ID, I can tag others like myself to bring in the weight to change it.
In an ideal system, I can see a single specialist identifier sitting on a subscription to each taxa, ie one per taxa. Some might warrant multiple taxa per identifier, but the point being if we each choose a taxa, and get really good at determining that taxa, then the workload is shared and collectively we cover everything! Those beginning out can take up higher level taxa, and those wanting challenge can hit the real difficult stuff. I think it would be useful to see on the taxa page how many users are “subscribed” to it, so that when you are looking for an area to work on, you can gauge where the help would be most useful. Some of course would choose purely on their own expertise or interest. In this scenario, the AI is only jump starting the process by placing the observation at a taxa that it deems most likely. I often go back and review a given taxa that I am learning, and that process acts as a quality assurance step that often picks up errors or missed characters etc.
cheers
Mark Tutty
kiwif...@gmail.com
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Thanks for the team's efforts.
Ralph


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