logo
AI helps Latin scholars decipher ancient Roman texts

AI helps Latin scholars decipher ancient Roman texts

Time of India3 days ago
Around 1,500 Latin inscriptions are discovered every year, offering an invaluable view into the daily life of ancient Romans -- and posing a daunting challenge for the historians tasked with interpreting them.But a new artificial intelligence tool, partly developed by Google researchers, can now help Latin scholars piece together these puzzles from the past, according to a study published on Wednesday.Inscriptions in Latin were commonplace across the Roman world, from laying out the decrees of emperors to graffiti on the city streets. One mosaic outside a home in the ancient city of Pompeii even warns: "Beware of the dog".These inscriptions are "so precious to historians because they offer first-hand evidence of ancient thought, language, society and history", said study co-author Yannis Assael, a researcher at Google's AI lab DeepMind."What makes them unique is that they are written by the ancient people themselves across all social classes on any subject. It's not just history written by the elite," Assael, who co-designed the AI model, told a press conference.However these texts have often been damaged over the millennia."We usually don't know where and when they were written," Assael said.So the researchers created a generative neural network, which is an AI tool that can be trained to identify complex relationships between types of data.They named their model Aeneas, after the Trojan hero and son of the Greek goddess Aphrodite.It was trained on data about the dates, locations and meanings of Latin transcriptions from an empire that spanned five million square kilometres over two millennia.Thea Sommerschield, an epigrapher at the University of Nottingham who co-designed the AI model, said that "studying history through inscriptions is like solving a gigantic jigsaw puzzle"."You can't solve the puzzle with a single isolated piece, even though you know information like its colour or its shape," she explained."To solve the puzzle, you need to use that information to find the pieces that connect to it."This can be a huge job.Latin scholars have to compare inscriptions against "potentially hundreds of parallels", a task which "demands extraordinary erudition" and "laborious manual searches" through massive library and museum collections, the study in the journal Nature said.The researchers trained their model on 176,861 inscriptions -- worth up to 16 million characters -- five percent of which contained images.It can now estimate the location of an inscription among the 62 Roman provinces, offer a decade when it was produced and even guess what missing sections might have contained, they said.To test their model, the team asked Aeneas to analyse a famous inscription called "Res Gestae Divi Augusti", in which Rome's first emperor Augustus detailed his accomplishments.Debate still rages between historians about when exactly the text was written.Though the text is riddled with exaggerations, irrelevant dates and erroneous geographical references, the researchers said that Aeneas was able to use subtle clues such as archaic spelling to land on two possible dates -- the two being debated between historians.More than 20 historians who tried out the model found it provided a useful starting point in 90 percent of cases, according to DeepMind.The best results came when historians used the AI model together with their skills as researchers, rather than relying solely on one or the other, the study said."Since their breakthrough, generative neural networks have seemed at odds with educational goals, with fears that relying on AI hinders critical thinking rather than enhances knowledge," said study co-author Robbe Wulgaert, a Belgian AI researcher."By developing Aeneas, we demonstrate how this technology can meaningfully support the humanities by addressing concrete challenges historians face."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

AI just cracked the code: Ancient Roman messages erased for centuries are finally revealed
AI just cracked the code: Ancient Roman messages erased for centuries are finally revealed

Hindustan Times

timea day ago

  • Hindustan Times

AI just cracked the code: Ancient Roman messages erased for centuries are finally revealed

Centuries after the Roman Empire left its mark across, many of its stories still sit locked inside damaged stone and pottery. In recent years, researchers faced the daunting problem of reading ancient Latin inscriptions where much of the text had been lost to time. These fragments, once etched for the public or to honour the dead, are now more like half-finished sentences. For historians, each is a puzzle with missing pieces. New technology is helping to reveal lost Roman stories by restoring Latin inscriptions once thought too damaged to ever read.(Unsplash) AI helps fill in the blanks Now, a fresh approach is taking shape. Historians have teamed up with Google DeepMind to create a new tool, called Aeneas, that helps fill in the blanks of broken inscriptions. The software owes its name to a character from Roman legend, but its work is entirely grounded in the digital age. Unlike earlier methods that leaned on guesswork or limited cross-checking, Aeneas draws on a huge database, learning from thousands of ancient Latin writings and images. This helps it suggest which words might be missing when researchers come across another cracked tablet or worn slab. At the heart of the tool is a single aim. Help experts reconstruct Latin text where gaps have left meaning uncertain or lost. Aeneas can look at what remains, compare it to patterns and phrases found in its training set of over 170,000 inscriptions, and offer predictions for what likely belongs in the missing sections. This works even if the gap's length is unknown. In tests with simulated damage, Aeneas restored missing words with a level of accuracy that has surprised the academic community. When paired with real experts, the combined team recovered significantly more of the original meaning than either could achieve on their own. What sets Aeneas apart? What sets Aeneas apart is its focus on practicality. It not only predicts lost chunks of text but also links researchers to similar inscriptions or key people and places named elsewhere in ancient writing. In studies, historians found these suggestions valuable nine out of ten times when looking for context or starting new research threads. The tool can also estimate, with reasonable certainty, when and where in the Roman world an inscription was created. Tests show it can date some inscriptions to within a decade and identify the region in about three out of four cases. This brings new clarity to questions that once lingered for years. Historians note that Latin inscriptions are among the richest sources for everyday Roman life, records of law, religion, military affairs, commerce, and even quiet personal messages. Across the Mediterranean and beyond, new finds surface, but many carry breaks, erosion, or missing pieces that have always made interpretation slow. By bringing Aeneas into the research process, scholars can now piece together stories more quickly and fill in many of those crucial missing details. While the tool was built with Roman Latin in mind, experts think its approach could help with other languages and periods, where time has left only fragments. It is already free to use and available to the wider research community online. Some scholars urge caution, noting that machines can suggest, but people must always check the answer against what is known about the history, location, and context. The hope is that Aeneas will not just fix broken sentences but foster new discoveries and spark fresh studies. As more ancient words return to light, a bigger story about the Roman world is slowly coming back together - one complete sentence at a time.

Your brain might have aged faster during the pandemic, even without Covid-19
Your brain might have aged faster during the pandemic, even without Covid-19

Business Standard

timea day ago

  • Business Standard

Your brain might have aged faster during the pandemic, even without Covid-19

The Covid-19 pandemic may have accelerated the ageing of the human brain, even in people who were never infected, according to a new study. Mounting stress, prolonged isolation, and widespread disruption during the pandemic appear to have left lasting biological effects on brain structure. Researchers have now found measurable signs of this accelerated ageing across the general population, with older adults, men, and those from disadvantaged backgrounds being most affected. The study, led by researchers at the University of Nottingham and published in the peer-reviewed journal Nature Communications, titled Accelerated brain ageing during the Covid-19 pandemic, analysed brain scans of 996 healthy adults sourced from UK Biobank, which holds the de-identified biological and health data of over half a million people. The scans taken before and after the pandemic showed that brains aged an average of 5.5 months faster during lockdown. The findings showed that while men aged about six months faster, women aged by around 4.5 months. Those from disadvantaged backgrounds experienced up to seven months of additional brain ageing. According to the researchers, this is the first major study to isolate pandemic stress from actual Covid infection and still find evidence of measurable brain ageing. How did researchers measure brain ageing? Using AI models trained on more than 15,000 brain scans, scientists calculated each participant's 'brain age gap'—the difference between how old their brain appeared versus their actual age. A larger gap indicated faster ageing. They compared people scanned twice before the pandemic with those scanned once before and once after. The latter group, who lived through lockdowns, social isolation, and economic stress, showed significantly faster brain ageing. Can stress actually age your brain? Emerging research suggests it can. Chronic stress, lack of social stimulation, disrupted routines, and reduced cognitive engagement can all affect brain regions responsible for memory and executive function. The researchers emphasised that brain health is shaped not only by disease but also by environmental factors and everyday experiences. Who was most affected by accelerated brain ageing? According to the study, the most affected groups were: Men (33 per cent more acceleration than women) Older adults Individuals from low-income or disadvantaged backgrounds The findings suggest that socioeconomic vulnerability, limited healthcare access, and lower social support systems heightened the impact of pandemic-related stress. How did Covid infection affect the brain differently? While brain ageing was seen across the general population, cognitive decline was reported only in those who had been infected with Covid-19. Infected individuals performed worse on mental flexibility and processing speed tests, especially the Trail Making Test (TMT), which is often used to assess early dementia symptoms. Thus, while pandemic stress altered brain structure, infection was linked to functional cognitive decline. Are these brain changes permanent? It is unclear. Since the study only measured two time points per person, researchers cannot yet confirm whether brain ageing will stabilise or reverse over time. However, they remain cautiously optimistic. 'Our study highlights the pandemic's significant impact on brain health, beyond direct infection effects, and underscores the need to address broader social and health inequalities,' the authors noted. How can you protect your brain now? Even if the pandemic aged your brain slightly, there are proven ways to support brain health: Maintain regular social connections Engage in physical activity Follow a brain-healthy diet Prioritise mental well-being and sleep Keep your mind active with learning and problem-solving While ageing is inevitable, experts say the rate of cognitive decline can still be influenced. According to experts, by avoiding certain everyday habits, like prolonged sitting, skipping meals, excessive screen time, chronic stress, and social isolation, we may be able to slow down cognitive ageing and protect our mental well-being.

Google commits $37 million to AI development in Africa
Google commits $37 million to AI development in Africa

The Hindu

timea day ago

  • The Hindu

Google commits $37 million to AI development in Africa

Google on Thursday unveiled a $37 million package to accelerate artificial intelligence development across Africa, pledging support for local AI research and projects ranging from crop monitoring to adapting technology for the continent's languages. The commitment from the U.S. tech giant also included efforts to back startups in the health and education sectors. "Africa is home to some of the most important and inspiring work in AI today," said James Manyika, a senior vice president at the company, speaking during the launch of an "AI community centre" in Ghana's capital, Accra. The centre will serve as a hub for training, collaboration and experimentation, including programming for AI literacy. Among the flagship initiatives unveiled is the AI Collaborative for Food Security, meant to connect researchers and non-profits to develop tools to improve early hunger detection, crop resilience and decision-making for smallholder farmers. The project aims to help African food systems withstand growing climate and economic shocks. AI has already been deployed by some farmers across the continent, including in nearby Nigeria, long home to a booming domestic tech industry. Local agri-tech companies have popped up to monitor soil conditions for crops or temperature and humidity on chicken farms. Google is also set to launch a financing platform to back AI-driven startups in the agriculture, health and education sectors. Through its philanthropic arm, it committed $7 million to expand AI education initiatives in Nigeria, Kenya, South Africa and Ghana. Google also announced $3 million in funding for Masakhane, a tech collective advancing AI tools in more than 40 African languages. A pair of $1 million research grants meanwhile will go to the African Institute of Data Science and Artificial Intelligence and the Wits Machine Intelligence and Neural Discovery Institute, both in South Africa. Sam George, Ghana's communications and digital technology minister, called on Ghanaians to use AI "to look at how we're going to fix our national challenges such as flooding, waste management and traffic management". Google's past AI initiatives in Africa have focused on maternal health tech in Ghana and Nigeria, wildfire alerts in east Africa and language model development in Accra and Nairobi.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store