Home Asia With her algorithm, Indian professor in Australia fights misogyny online

With her algorithm, Indian professor in Australia fights misogyny online

247
0

Richi Nayak has developed a new algorithm that can automatically spot and report misogynistic posts on social …Read More

NEW DELHI: Richi Nayak, a computer science professor and machine learning expert, has developed a new algorithm that can automatically spot and report misogynistic posts on social media platforms.
“At present, the onus is on the user to report abuse. Our machine-learning solution can identify and report this content to protect women online,” the professor from Queensland University of Technology, Australia, told TOIon Saturday. Details of the new algorithm were published recently in the journal Springer Nature.
Nayak, a postgraduate from IIT Roorkee, was looking to probe how the technical field of machine learning — which focuses on developing systems that can use data to learn and improve their ability overtime — can help a social cause-driven problem. Research has shown that online harassment can have devastating psychological effects on women. An Amnesty International IPSOS MORI poll in 2017 said women reported stress, anxiety or panic attacks as a result of harmful online experiences.
Nayak knew if she could make identifying and removing such content easier, it could help create a safer online space for women. Nayaks team, including research fellow Md Abul Bashar, set out to develop a machine learning algorithm which could pick up on misogynistic and abusive words.
To make their algorithm accurate, they trained it to understand context, and to some extent, intent, behind what is being said. “A machine learning algorithm relies on data that is used to train it. The main cRead More – Source

[contf] [contfnew]

times of india

[contfnewc] [contfnewc]

Previous article30 years on, Indian film wins critics award at Venice fest
Next articleControversial Brexit bill has ‘damaged trust’ between Britain and EU