Harnessing EVE Online For Science (mmorpg.com)
An anonymous reader writes: Scientists and the developers of space MMORPG EVE Online are working on a project to harness the power of the game's huge playerbase to do useful scientific work. The Human Protein Atlas has 13 million images to map, and there's no way a small team of scientists can manage that task alone. CCP Games, the makers of EVE, will try to encourage contribution by creating a mini-game within EVE to train players and get them to do some cataloging. To start, "Project Discovery will feed about a 250,000 images of microscopic cells and tissue that players will then study to identify basic shapes and structures, categorizing the images in a way that will help scientists deduce a given protein's purpose." The developers are confident that the EVE community, which has already come together to support various charity endeavors, will rally behind this noble cause as well. To get players to participate, the devs reward players with loyalty points that have some sort of positive effect within EVE.
If they had an API to request an image and return the results, I'm sure quite a few mobile games would get behind building that in. Way better than click hammering for no purpose.
Suborbital [spaceflight] is the special olympics of spaceflight. - Rei
I'd love to see more game devs do stuff like this.
Some sort of opt-in system where you could get some sort of benefit for doing it, even if it is only cosmetic in design.
Forced on people would likely annoy people enough to maliciously abuse the system, sadly. People can be evil.
Even Google Image Tagging got abused when large numbers of people started tagging images as nigger.
fail
Might make more sense to apply computer vision to the problem, have a software based evaluation of the image and then flag promising images to be viewed by actual medical personnel. This is an approach already widely in use today. Scanning sonogram, x-ray, mri, etc imagery for "anomalies" and highlighting those for medical personnel.
Has the writer ever actually played eve? It's a game about causing other players as much frustration as possible. And now they want to give the players a chance to mess up something even more important than internet spaceships?
I think this is a more balanced take on the issue.
Neal Stephenson had this as a plot point in his book REAMDE. An MMORPG had a mini-game where you had to recognize some objects, but actually they were being fed TSA machine images from the airports, looking for dangerous objects in luggage.
Sorry but how will they differentiate between the one who actually do the analysis and the ones that just click buttons to get the reward? I thought about speed but some people are pretty good a pattern recognition and will be fast.
A torp launcher, cruise launcher, a heavy assault launcher, a heavy launcher, a rocket launcher, a light missile launcher, a shield booster, an armor repairer, a hull repairer, a 1MN afterburner, a 10MN afterburner, a 100MN afterburner.....
Should have been invincible, but the other guy cheated and CCP don't know how to make games.
So you just whacked any old shit on your ship and decided it should be invincible. Good god, read a wiki or something before undocking.
Excuse the Unicode crap in my posts. That's an apostrophe, and slashdot is busted.
It's odd that Zooniverse https://www.zooniverse.org/ hasn't gotten involved with this. They do all sorts of projects that involve humans categorizing or analyzing images, some quite complicated. I don't know if THIS particular project can be simplified enough for the average Joe to work with, but it might be worth a try.