Google has made certain announcements related to artificial intelligence lately, and that includes the development of AI that can talk like humans, a project for AI that can compete humans at real-time game plan video game StarCraft and the hiring of two researchers in the field to take a lead on Google Cloud's machine learning unit.
Google's New Little Game Called "Quick, Draw!"
Google has made the announcements of several AI experiments online that users can try and play, one of which is a fun little game called Quick, Draw! The Pictionary-style game- called 'Quick, draw!' - help users to draw a popular object or phrase in just 20 seconds using a mouse cursor on a desktop or just simply using a finger on their mobile device.
What Is "Quick, Draw!" All About?
Upon accessing the Quick, Draw! The website, players are greeted with a simple landing page and can learn to recognize doodles.You have six drawings to complete, and at the end, you can check back and see why Google gave out the guesses it did. You can even check out some other drawings of the same stuff by other players. This also gives you a preview on how the learning process works for the AI.
The software begins suggesting words or phrases it thinks the user is trying to illustrate until it gets the right one.After six drawings, the game will summarize the results. It will show the drawings that the AI correctly guessed and those that it had trouble with, and clicking on each drawing will show the other objects that the AI recognized it as and how other players drew that particular object.
As the game calls out objects it sees as the player's drawing takes shape, users are left thinking what they could add to the drawing so that Quick, Draw! can guess it as the correct object showing the other objects that it linked with the drawing will also help the AI to learn from the mistakes that it made and make enhancements to its guesses as more players try it.