Monday, January 4, 2016

Human Computation - The power of crowds

With any genuine brain cells in our stroke associations they could easily sponsor a number of competitions to address problems in stroke. Since our stroke associations have completely failed at solving anything in stroke they might as well let the public do it.

My three leading candidates are:
1. What are the 1000+ failed neuroprotective research trials that Dr. Michael Tymianski, of the Toronto Western Hospital Research Institute in Canada  mentions and what is the common linkage as to why they failed in humans?
2. What are the most promising solutions to the 5 known causes of the neuronal cascade of death?
3.  What causes a neuron to drop what it is doing and take on a neighboring neurons function? I.E. exactly how does neuroplasticity work so we can make it repeatable?

Human Computation - The power of crowds

  1. Janis L. Dickinson2
+ Author Affiliations
  1. 1Human Computation Institute, Fairfax, VA 22032, USA.
  2. 2Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14850, USA.
  1. E-mail: pem@humancomputation.org
Human computation, a term introduced by Luis von Ahn (1), refers to distributed systems that combine the strengths of humans and computers to accomplish tasks that neither can do alone (2). The seminal example is reCAPTCHA, a Web widget used by 100 million people a day when they transcribe distorted text into a box to prove they are human. This free cognitive labor provides users with access to Web content and keeps websites safe from spam attacks, while feeding into a massive, crowd-powered transcription engine that has digitized 13 million articles from The New York Times archives (3). But perhaps the best known example of human computation is Wikipedia. Despite initial concerns about accuracy (4), it has become the key resource for all kinds of basic information. Information science has begun to build on these early successes, demonstrating the potential to evolve human computation systems that can model and address wicked problems (those that defy traditional problem-solving methods) at the intersection of economic, environmental, and sociopolitical systems.

No comments:

Post a Comment