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Machine intelligence comes of age
Elsewhere at the Royal Society exhibition was this holographic radar scanner for landmines.
The holographic radar scanner provides clear enough images of what is buried to allow a person to determine whether the object is a landmine or a piece of junk.
This is an improvement over the most common current methods for detecting landmines, which is using a metal detector to scan for mines and a metal stick to prod beneath the surface of the soil to see if it makes contact with a solid object.
These mine-removal techniques not only result in about two casualties for every 500 mines that are removed but they also are an inefficient way of removing mines because so much time is spent digging up junk items by mistake.
The picture shows that the resolution produced by the system is such that it is easy to distinguish between a buried piece of trash in the top left of the photo and the telltale circular shape of a dummy landmine in the top right.
The system has been developed by researchers based in five countries but is not currently in use in everyday landmine clearance.
Photo credit: Nick Heath/silicon.com
Caption by: Nick Heath
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