I would like to hear about interesting projects which made use of Amazon's Mechanical Turk.
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Found today: using MTurk to conduct scientific research. |
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Andy Baio of waxy.org has done a few interesting things with it: |
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My favorite example of Mechanical Turk in action is one where workers had to extract data from figures and tables in scientific literature. There's a good description and vidoe of the experiment here: http://usefulchem.blogspot.com/2008/12/mechanical-turk-does-solubility-on.html |
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Halosys: We used Mechanical Turk for some of the customer projects we developed. This is one of the things that we suggest to our customers when they are ready to launch but need data. Specially interesting were projects like filling in the content for a few caricatures and then showing that on the customer site. |
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There are two works by Aaron Koblin that spring to mind:
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We've used it to approve images that apply to a business. Not terribly interesting, but found it pretty useful in this regard. The tasks were completed very quickly. |
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It was used to help search for James Gray when he went missing. |
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I haven't done anything with it yet but I've been meaning to use it for music search by having an app that accepted recordings of people humming or singing a tune and then using the Turk to identify the tune. |
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