TE
TechEcho
Home24h TopNewestBestAskShowJobs
GitHubTwitter
Home

TechEcho

A tech news platform built with Next.js, providing global tech news and discussions.

GitHubTwitter

Home

HomeNewestBestAskShowJobs

Resources

HackerNews APIOriginal HackerNewsNext.js

© 2025 TechEcho. All rights reserved.

Urban Legends in Computer Vision

2 pointsby ebcodeover 7 years ago

1 comment

eesmithover 7 years ago
CV is older than the 1960s, and Minsky had enough experience with it to know it wasn&#x27;t an undergraduate summer student job.<p>Minsky and Russell Kirsch worked on CV back in the 1950s. Quoting <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;conservancy.umn.edu&#x2F;bitstream&#x2F;handle&#x2F;11299&#x2F;107503&#x2F;oh179mlm.pdf?sequence=1&amp;isAllowed=y" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;conservancy.umn.edu&#x2F;bitstream&#x2F;handle&#x2F;11299&#x2F;107503&#x2F;oh...</a> :<p>Minsky: From the very start AI labs were obsessed with making machines that could see. So there was the early vision work. A lot of the early vision work was somehow associated with AI. Although my friend Russell Kirsch at the Bureau of Standards, had been doing it as early as 1954 or &#x27;55.<p>NORBERG: Which? Vision?<p>MINSKY: A little bit of computer vision with the SEAC machine. Nobody used the word AI yet. He was the kind of person who could say well, everybody&#x27;s having their machines crunching numbers, can we have one that can recognize patterns. Of course, the electrical engineers would dispute that and say, we&#x27;ve been making sensory systems all the way back to World War II.<p>In <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.webofstories.com&#x2F;play&#x2F;marvin.minsky&#x2F;29" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.webofstories.com&#x2F;play&#x2F;marvin.minsky&#x2F;29</a> you can hear Minsky talking about recognizing letter shapes in the 1950s. Though I don&#x27;t know if his work used images, or simply a graph data structures.<p>Minsky&#x27;s 1960 &quot;STEPS TOWARD ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE&quot; (see <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;web.media.mit.edu&#x2F;~minsky&#x2F;papers&#x2F;steps.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;web.media.mit.edu&#x2F;~minsky&#x2F;papers&#x2F;steps.html</a> ) also describes some of the work toward training a computer in &quot;recognizing normalized printed or hand-printed characters.&quot;