Deep Learning Helps Recover Historic Inscriptions with Unprecedented Precision

A conservationist works on a 1,500-year-old mosaic floor bearing Greek writing, discovered in Jerusalem's Old City. (Reuters file photo)
A conservationist works on a 1,500-year-old mosaic floor bearing Greek writing, discovered in Jerusalem's Old City. (Reuters file photo)
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Deep Learning Helps Recover Historic Inscriptions with Unprecedented Precision

A conservationist works on a 1,500-year-old mosaic floor bearing Greek writing, discovered in Jerusalem's Old City. (Reuters file photo)
A conservationist works on a 1,500-year-old mosaic floor bearing Greek writing, discovered in Jerusalem's Old City. (Reuters file photo)

A new AI-based deep learning technique has recovered ancient Greek texts, determined they date to the 5th century AD, and pinpointed their original location with an unprecedented precision.

According to Agence France Press (AFP), this technique described in the journal Nature, allows historians specializing in epigraphy to track tens of thousands of inscriptions engraved in stone, clay or metal.

Many of these inscriptions have deteriorated over time, leaving some text unreadable due to missing pieces or transfer from original site, and therefore, the radiocarbon dating technique cannot be used in this case.

To help epigraphists decipher these inscriptions, researchers from the Universities of Venice, Oxford, Athens in collaboration with Google’s DeepMind lab have developed a deep learning tool, an artificial intelligence technique that uses a “neural network” that simulates the human brain.

Named Ithaca, after the island of Odysseus in “The Iliad and The Odyssey”, this tool was trained on nearly 80,000 texts from the Packard Humanities Institute database, the largest digital collection of ancient Greek inscriptions. Ithaca’s language processing technique considers the order in which words appear in sentences and their links to each other to better contextualize them.

Because the texts feature many gaps, Ithaca had to merge the words and characters scattered on the stones. It then examined decrees from the 5th century BC engraved on stones from the Acropolis of Athens.

The tool assumed that the letter sequencing could help fill in the gaps in accordance with the historical context. For example, it suggested the word “covenant” to fill a six-character word missing from an oath of allegiance to a city in Athens. Then, the final decision to select the most credible prediction was left to the historians.

But their work was made much easier, as the work of Ithaca alone was 62% accurate. And when used by historians, the accuracy rate of the tool, described as“accessible”, jumped from 25% to 72%, explained the study published in the journal Nature, highlighting the benefits of man-machine cooperation.



Samsung Invests $1.8 Billion More in Vietnam for OLED Manufacturing Plant 

Security guards stand outside a Samsung facility during a strike by the factory workers demanding higher wages in Sriperumbudur, near the city of Chennai, India, September 16, 2024. (Reuters)
Security guards stand outside a Samsung facility during a strike by the factory workers demanding higher wages in Sriperumbudur, near the city of Chennai, India, September 16, 2024. (Reuters)
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Samsung Invests $1.8 Billion More in Vietnam for OLED Manufacturing Plant 

Security guards stand outside a Samsung facility during a strike by the factory workers demanding higher wages in Sriperumbudur, near the city of Chennai, India, September 16, 2024. (Reuters)
Security guards stand outside a Samsung facility during a strike by the factory workers demanding higher wages in Sriperumbudur, near the city of Chennai, India, September 16, 2024. (Reuters)

South Korean electronic manufacturer Samsung Display Co plans to invest $1.8 billion for a factory this year in northern Vietnam to produce OLED displays for automobiles and technology equipment, the Southeast Asian country said on Sunday.

The new facility for the manufacture of organic light-emitting diode (OLED) displays will be located in Yen Phong industrial park in Bac Ninh province east of Hanoi and close to an existing Samsung electronics plant, the government said in a statement released after the meeting between Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh and the General Director of Samsung Vietnam Choi Joo Ho.

Bac Ninh authorities and Samsung Display on Sunday also signed a memorandum of understanding of the project, local media reported, adding the investment would raise Samsung's total investment in Bac Ninh to $8.3 billion from the current $6.5 billion.

Vietnam has over the last decade emerged as one of the most attractive production hubs for electronics companies.

According to Choi, Samsung has established six manufacturing plants, one research and development center, and one sales entity in Vietnam, with a cumulative investment of $22.4 billion.