A mosaic outside a home in the ancient
Roman city of Pompeii reading: "Beware of the dog"
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 kilometers 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 color or its shape," she explained.
"To
solve the puzzle, you need to use that information to find the pieces that
connect to it."
The AI tool helps researchers estimate
when a Roman inscription was made.
Tested on Augustus
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—5% 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 analyze 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% 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."
Source: AI helps Latin scholars decipher ancient Roman texts
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