How AI Companies Are Hiring Small Town Workers To Train Robots

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Read Time: 3 mins
The market for humanoid robots is expected to hit $38 billion in the next decade. (Source: Unsplash)

As artificial intelligence continues to dominate our digital lives, its next frontier lies beyond the screen in understanding how we move in the real world. Across the globe, a rising number of trainers are guiding AI to grasp human motion, helping it step out of computers and into our homes, workplaces, and factories, reports the Los Angeles Times.

A report by Nilesh Christopher highlighted how AI companies are recording visuals which involve basic human movements to train AI to do the same.

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He gives the example of Naveen Kumar, who works for a startup which needs such data. Kumar's job is to record footage of folding towels.

“He mounts a GoPro camera to his forehead and follows a regimented list of hand movements to capture exact point-of-view footage of how a human folds.”

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“If it takes more than a minute or he misses any steps, he has to start over,” Christopher writes.

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