Artificial Intelligence to Predict Sports Injuries 201
nakhla writes "MSNBC.com is running a story on how an Italian soccer team is using artificial intelligence to predict sports injuries. The team is working with Computer Associates to develop neural network technology that can be combined with daily tests of the athletes to determine patterns which occur right before a player gets injured. Of course, one has to assume that it wouldn't be able to predict a player getting kicked in the head in the middle of the game, resulting in a concussion." I was wondering how to tie a World Cup story into Slashdot. Congratulations to Senegal.
Actually... (Score:1)
Good prediction algorithm: (Score:1)
Re:Actually... (Score:1)
That's Scary (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:That's Scary (Score:1, Informative)
Problem? (Score:4, Interesting)
Technology is supposed to solve problems, not create them.
Re:Problem? (Score:2)
At the risk of getting flamed, most analysis' of social patterns and technology suggests that any given technology is garaunteed to create problems as well as solve them. Of course, since we're talking about the future, while you might know what you're solving, you can never be 100% sure you know what problems you'll cause.
Please tell me this isn't news.
Re:Problem? (Score:1)
But you could always make a neural net to tell you what problems you'll cause
Re:Problem? (Score:1)
Re:Problem? (Score:1)
This can be usefull information in the right hands..
Trying to find out who get injured? (Score:1)
"Make them an offer they can't refuse"
Re:Trying to find out who get injured? (Score:1)
Americans and soccer (Score:4, Informative)
ah gawd, AC Milan is one of the most famous teams in the world, maybe the name could be included in the article, not just an Italian soccer team.
Re:Americans and soccer (Score:4, Insightful)
besides what is intersting about this article is not the team itself, its the way they are using the technology to attempt to predict future injuries.
PS wtg Senegal, go Azul!!!
Re:Americans and soccer (Score:2, Interesting)
What has always seemed weird to me about the club (and their otherwise excellent website [acmilan.com] doesn't seem to explain it) is that their name uses the English language version of their home city's name. Around the days of big matches it is not unusual to see signs on the autostrade around where the final "o" in "Milano" has been painted out by fans.
Re:Americans and soccer (Score:1, Informative)
sorry you are totally mistaken
Milan is the correct spelling in most (all?) northern Italian dialects. It's therefore the native spelling of the city Italians know as Milano
. (just as Trst [primorski.it] is the native spelling of Trieste [ilpiccolo.it] :-).)
Re:Americans and soccer (Score:1)
Interesting theory. Milan is not a spelling I have ever seen in Northern Italy, but you did force me to do some research aka a Google search [google.com].
The club was originally the Milan Cricket and Football Club. Unless you can come up with an Italian dialect meaning for cricket, I don't think your theory can be sustained.
Re:Americans and soccer (Score:1)
I find it interesting to know which team it is. If it is a team as well-known and with as much money as Milan then it is likely to be well executed, unlike if it was some unknown team that hired the coach's son because he had taken an AI-class in school.
Re:Americans and soccer (Score:2)
For example lets say I said Montreal Canadians, Philly Flyers, Boston Bruins? What would you say? Probably nothing since they most likely mean nothing to you. Or lets say I say The Rocket Richard, Gordie Howe, Ken Dryden, Guy Lafleur, Bobby Clark, etc. These names are legendary in ice hockey...
My point is that while the name AC Milan may mean something to you and me there are a lot folks that it means nothing.
And who said it best? When in Rome do as the Romans do... North Americans understand Italian soccer team not football team AC Milan.
Re:Americans and soccer (Score:2)
I'd say they are Montreal Canadiens, and not Canadians
A bit different to some people. Just like "InterMilan" and "AC Milan".
Americans and Cycling (Score:2)
"ah gawd, AC Milan is one of the most famous teams in the world, maybe the name could be included in the article, not just an Italian soccer team."
Yeah, that's not all that's happening in Milan, either [gazzetta.it]
Go Tyler!!!! [tylerhamilton.com]
Handicapper's dream (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Handicapper's dream (Score:1)
"Portugal's first game in the World Cup finals will be a Group D tie against the United States on June 5."
Of course now sports loving Portuguese and US hackers get to fight over turning a tie into a win...
Re:Handicapper's dream (Score:1)
It is here:
http://fifaworldcup.yahoo.com/en/020522/1/jdy.h
I see it already. (Score:2, Funny)
-Ok
(at the 35th minute jim stands still, at which point a brick from the fans smashes his head).
The coach returned the brogram cause it was bugged.
Artificial intelligence and sports (Score:3, Funny)
1. Grade inflation so that the jocks won't miss the big game for the state championships
OR
2. Jocks buying term papers on the internet or beating up the liberal arts students to get them to do it for them so that they don't get considered unable to play by the NCAA and therefore miss the upcoming national championships.
Could be a timesaver (Score:2, Interesting)
Isn't the sustaining of injuries one of the cases that player agents make for multi-bizillion dollar salaries?
Birdie! (Score:2)
Re:Birdie! (Score:1)
Re:Birdie! (Score:1)
Interesting how humans automatically believe other humans are misinformed. I wonder if Occam considered that. Heh.
Forget injuries...replace the officials (Score:2)
You get the idea...
By the way...Go 'Canes!!
Detroit 7 Colorado 0 :) (Score:2)
Better Bet -- AI Refs/Umps (Score:1)
Of course some injuries are most commonly associated with certain sports (torn ACL == football, broken collar bone == cycling) and you're not going to do much to stop that, aside from some absurd contrivance like the old OSHA Approved Cowboy [hsegroup.com] was wearing.
that has "markov matrix"... (Score:1)
(as does my forehead)
World Cup (Score:2, Funny)
funny semantics (Score:3, Funny)
Re:funny semantics (Score:1)
I'm not quite sure how bad such an injury would effect a soccer player, but obviously this is limited to soccer.
Re:funny semantics (Score:2)
also impressed that they have employed genies, was wondering when Barbara Eden would find gainfull employment again, she's still got a sexy torso at like the age of 60 or something
genetic headlines (Score:2)
Well, Michael, I can create you a genetic program for this situation. You can tell it "I want /. to feature xxx-flavor-of-the-day", and it will come up with a snappy headline, and a nice semi-controvertial article. So what if the links it makes up are fabricated, I mean no one actually follows them anyway, right?
The best part is, I can build it for you at the rock-bottom price of just $5,000,000!
preventative medicine (Score:5, Insightful)
One thing that everyone seems to be missing is that being able to predict injuries implies the ability to prevent them. Not through inaction but rather through preventative medicine such as physical therapy to strengthen certain muscles around a particularly dodgy ligament or something.
Such AI would also be useful in correcting improper training--if someone is slowly degrading their ankle/rotator cuff/lower vertebrae/what have you by doing something slightly wrong, such tests and analysis could predict the injury before it happens, allowing the coach/trainer to stop the athlete from doing that bad thing any more.
Re:preventative medicine (Score:1)
Re:preventative medicine (Score:1)
Professional athletes are already getting top-flight trainers. Imagine this kind of software (IF it works) deployed at every health club
Frink (Score:2)
Re:Frink (Score:2)
Professor Frink: Well, theoretically, yes. But the computer matches would be so perfect as to eliminate the thrill of romantic conquest. Mw-hurgn-whey.
Re:Frink (Score:2)
*laughs* (Score:2)
This is about the funniest line I've read today (and today they almost gave the coding staff control of the functional requirements specifications....). Of course the mathematicians think they can get the beast more accurate. Everyone knows
The statisticians believed the odds quoted because they thought them to be grounded in theory established; the physicists believed the odds quoted because they thought them to be grounded in observation.... Only murphy knew the truth.
Nah (Score:3, Insightful)
Semi-OT now:
What's up with the silly little cards used in soccer? (futbol) It's rather silly. How did it develop? DO people really care? Oh no, I got a piece of plastic pulled out on me, I'm so scared. Yes, I know that it is serious when someone gets red-carded, but the actual act of being penalized is lame as hell. Thoughts? What would be a better system? Everytime a foul is committed the opposing player who was injured gets to power-slam the offender? Sounds good to me. Would make soccer more fun to watch
Re:Nah (Score:1)
Tell that to Gazza in the '90 World Cup semi-final.
Re:Nah (Score:1)
Everytime a foul is committed the opposing player who was injured gets to power-slam the offender? Sounds good to me.
Damn dude, you had me laughing for a good couple minutes with that one. I can just picture it... <laughs some more>
Re:Nah (Score:1)
Re:Nah (Score:1)
The fall and decline of common sense (Score:2)
Source Code Excerpt (Score:5, Funny)
Here's a portion of the AI code that was leaked:
Buggy code (Score:1)
Logic Error (Score:1)
This is damn funny.
Small logic error, though: Seems reasonable that a player could potentially both be running with scissors and have received the Red Rider BB Gun as a Christmas gift.
Re:Source Code Excerpt (Score:1)
With neural network there will not be an obvious relation ship between the input and the output. It's based on data input.
I wonder which team provided the training data.
Re:Source Code Excerpt (Score:1)
The choice of input data seems a little strange (Score:1)
I would think they could quantify MRI/CT scans of the relevent areas of the body, and use those as inputs to the NN. Frankly I'm very suprised that it has shown 84% accuracy, but I guess without knowing what the sensors measure it's hard to say.
Re:The choice of input data seems a little strange (Score:2)
They're measuring the amount of nunocloreans, tiny creatures that live in symbiosis with all living beings, preventing injuries, particularly during athletic events and hand-to-hand combat. People who have many nunocloreans are very forceful and have few injuries. But the nunocloreans decrease with age, leading to things like broken hips.
English for Americans. Tip #46 (Score:1)
Re: World B-cup (Score:1)
Re:English for Americans. Tip #46 (Score:2, Funny)
I think the best version of this comment was given by John Cleese on US TV in an interview around the Clinton/Lewinsky newsfest. It went something like "There are three differences between the English and Americans. 1) We speak English, you don't. 2) When we host a world championship, we invite other countries to join in, and 3) When you meet our head of state, you only have to go down on one knee, not two."
Re:haha (Score:1)
Re:English for non-ARe:English for Americans. Tip (Score:1)
HAL (Score:2)
Fifa worldcup website (Score:2)
Don't they have an AI to tell them "We're going to need a bigger boat" ?
Re:Fifa worldcup website (Score:1)
They should outsource it to Akamai
Uhhh.... (Score:2)
Wow, and do you know what the computer is going to say? That people are most likely to get injured when taking RISKS! More risks, more likely injured. Big surpise, next we are going to try and predict who is likely going to get injured in a shootout based on information relaying where the guns are pointed!
-Sean
-Sean
This would have been a Good Thing® (Score:2)
world cup stories (Score:2)
Well taco, given how topical a lot of stories are (and don't even get me started on Ask Slashdot), i guess you could just post match scores on the front page.
This is a good place to start a flamewar on slashdot's US-centered-ness, since it looks like the US is one of the few countries where the soccer world cup isn't a completely paralyzing event (what with matches airing at 1 and 3 AM central US time, i bet a lot of sports fans across the continent will show up at work late and half-asleep, if at all, for the next month).
Re:world cup stories (Score:2)
Well, From June 19 through the 25th, we can have a daily article or three on World Cup as long as we tie it in to RoboCup [robocup.org] stories. What I'd like to see on the front page are the daily scores and stats from THAT. (I'll get my soccer stats live and from sources other than /. thankyouverymuch.)
Re:world cup stories (Score:1, Flamebait)
Yup, noone in the US gives to shits about soccer. In fact, a lot of folks here, well, kind of consider soccer to be a homosexual sport. There's just something really gay about running around in short shorts.
Re:world cup stories (Score:1)
I'm an American, but...
Look at our OTHER so-called sports. Golf? (dress up in funny cloths and hit a small ball.) Baseball? (Dress in PJs, whack a ball, and run around four bases). Football? (Dress in tights, slap the other player's ass, and get rough and dirty with lots of other guys.)
Ok, so I admit to not being a sports fan--but I really don't see how Soccor is any more "gay" than the rest of the national sports. (Bowling! Hockey! Track & Field! Frisbiee Golf!--er, scrap that last one.)
Rather Have The Reverse (Score:1)
I think I'd rather read an article in which athletes present their predictions on the future of AI.
Sorcerers responsible for Zidane's injury (Score:1)
Many people in Senegal, and in Africa more generally, pay sorcerers in order to put a curse on the rival team, and its best players. This article [yahoo.com] (in french) explains that : all teams that played against Senegal saw their best players injured for their round against Senegal !
So the scientific method to predict injuries must take into account the power of sorcerers ! Can artificial intelligence really know this information ?
Congratulations to Senegal - omg! (Score:1)
BUT, i HATE the fact senegal won. I know everybody loves a underdog win and everything, but jessus! never had i seen such a boring soccer game.They way they won was one of the ugliest things ever seen in football. , they played 4-5-1. But using prettymuch ALL their midfieldser as defenders. So in reality they played something like 8-1-1, which is about as defensive as it gets. The French played all the ball, since only one senegal player seemed to want to leave his own side of the field. But it worked, they won.. But it was one of the most boring VM matches ive ever seen.. The French had possesion (65 france 35 senegal), all they did was running around trying to find a hole in the abnormally big wall of a defence.
In basket terms, if one of the teams desides to not wanna play the game. And everybody just stands under their basket proctecing it, letting only one guy attack once in a while(hoping for a lucky punch).
Teams like this kill soccer...
Re:Congratulations to Senegal - omg! (Score:2)
a couple (?) of World Cups ago in semis.
That was an awesome game even though it
had the same dynamics you just described.
(IIRC Battistuta was the only one to venture
out of the Argentinian half, he scored his
one goal and that was enough).
Just because it is strong/lucky defense vs.
strong offense doesn't mean the game is
boring.
Re: Congratulations to Senegal - omg! (Score:1)
Brazil was playing much better (if you can define what 'better' is when we are talking about soccer).
Soccer is an amazing game. I can't explain why, it just is.
BTW, Viva la Fran^H^H^HSenegal!!!!
Re:Congratulations to Senegal - omg! (Score:1)
its easier to destroy than create. And i dislike that.
Maybe because I usally play an offensive midfielder , i dont know.
Btw. i disagree on the notion that all france have is Zidane. Trezeguet , Henry and Pirés springs to mind. Zindane is important, no doubt. But, France dominated the match yesterday anyways. Henry and Trezeguet both hit the woodworks, u dont get closer than that.
Like ? (Score:1)
nothin can beat human unpredictability
In Other (slightly related) News... (Score:2)
The Supreme Court overturns today's CIPA ruling, so people can no longer go to the library to see this photo [go.com] of a young woman, shirtless, on a soccer field. It was deemed pr0nographic by the government censors^H^H^H^H^H^H^H officials.
My contribution.... (Score:1)
{
RaiseInjury("Concussion");
}
unless... (Score:1)
This is ridiculous (Score:2)
Sports injuries happen because of "accidents." Neural nets aren't crystal balls. Hell, the stock market is more predictable than a sports injury, and getting a neural net to predict that is still a rough problem.
Let me get this straight... (Score:1)
What next, a peripheral to test the various qualities of beer and curry?
msnbc poll: (Score:2)
That would be one interesting rule. What counts as a neural network? Most current neural networks are either heavily centralized or mildly useful. I'm sure they would stretch the definition to cover most "computing devices"!
And, how would they know? It's hard enough trying to find out which players use steroids. Are computing devices going to become contraband?
Lastly, what would be the point of the law? Is it to give bad prospects better chances? Is it the first step in outlawing meticulous stat keeping?
Really, I'm not too surprised. Remember, the average poll taker is probably a MSN subscriber.
Injuries -vs- accidents (Score:2)
soccer vs. football (Score:1)
Soccer is an abbreviated form of "Association Football"
footaball (Score:1)
Real footballers don't wear padding (Score:1)
Why is it that all these big, strong men need so much padding? And why do they have to keep stopping every three seconds?
When Australian rugby players go to America for "football", they have a great time, and usually win. When the Yanks come over here, they usually take one look at how the game should be played, and say "No way in hell am I going out there without any padding". And then there's the whining about how the game goes on for the entire session, without any breaks. Except for half time.
But even rugby and AFL get called "football", so I suppose that the soccer freaks will still jump on me for that :-)
Personally, I gotta wonder about a group of guys who like to watch another group of guys grapple and feel eachother up, and go on about how fit these athletes are, and have their favourites. And yet they proclaim to be straight? Admit it. If you like watching guys..... :-p
Re:Senegal suck (Score:2)
Too bad France didn't have this AI, or they might have held Zidane out of the last match to rest him.
And I say "pppppptttttthhhhpppppt" to France.
The really valuable AI would be to predict player personalities... not only would it have helped the Irish to avoid losing Roy Keane, but it would be invaluable for the 49ers, nearly any NBA team, etc. The stress test case could be to set it to work on Mike Tyson's personality.
Re:soccer sucks (Score:2, Insightful)
In fact, everyone that I know is pumped about the World Cup. We even worked our work project schedule around it, as we realized productivity will be low this month.
Seriously, what is it? Is it not manly enough for you? As if baseball is a real physical sport...
North America's view (excluding Mexico) of soccer really sucks. It's an amazing sport -- funny that the rest of the world seems to think so too.
Re:soccer sucks (Score:1)
Re:soccer sucks (Score:2)
If you want some good-ole canadian bashing, just watch the South Park movie. "Blame Canada, Blame Canada"
Re:soccer sucks (Score:2)
The problem with the US (not really a problem) is that the US has way too many sports. Whereas in the rest of the world sports are focused in a few. The rest of the world simply does not get excited about umpteen sports. Hence football simply does not get the frame of mind.
Also realize that Americans do not get as excited and emotional about their sports. Consider the world cup and how France and Italian companies are letting people go home earlier to watch the games. No way that would ever happen in the US or Canada. Could you imagine Jean Chretien getting excited about Team Canada in Ice Hocket? Not really and have not seen it.
When Germany won the World Cup highways in Germany simply shutdown and people got out of their cars to chear for them. It is quite a different intensity. Me at that time I was in Canada and driving through Kitchener Waterloo honking my horn with other Germans.
Too busy to be good! (Score:1)
...
It's an amazing sport -- funny that the rest of the world seems to think so too.
Our sports thoroughly cover the year already, with each sport's season ending nicely as the next begins. Soccer tends to overlap a lot of these, and American teams are for the most part much much less fun to watch than international clubs like AC Milan or Parma or Man U. Without satellite TV most people have a very limited selection of international (read: quality) games to watch, which won't help the popularity grow, which won't help the skills of our teams grow, which won't help the popularity grow. (As much as we like, as Americans, to see ourselves beaten by third world countries.)
Re:soccer sucks (Score:2, Informative)
Most people who play soccer are actually playing football as it is under this name that they play it.
Maybe you find it hard to understand that a sport with this name consists mainly in kicking a ball with your foot, rather than a sport in which you take something called a ball, but that is not even round, and taking it in your hands...
Finially an answer (Score:2, Insightful)
Seriusly, half the players playing football (the entire, oftenly very FAT defensive line springs to mind) could never be even ½ good at soccer. Because its a game not filled with 20something breaks to make room for all the commercials, no you have to actually RUN the entire game, 45*2 minutes. That why u need to be fit, not a fat football paying fuck.. That couldnt catch a retired old lady if she was to steal his crotch strap.
Oh, yeah btw. "football" is ruby for sissies.. did'nt you know?
Re:Finially an answer (Score:1)
Actually, football (soccer) is 2*45 minutes. Its more (American) football taht is 45*2 minutes to accomodate for the ad/breath-catching breaks.
Re:Soccer!! (Score:2)
Lets see game played with foot hitting the ball. Oh yeah lets call this football.
Version B:
Man gives odd squished shaped ball to other man via the way of the crotch and then passing said ball by throwing. At that point other man holding ball runs like mad avoiding other running like mad men (always holding ball in hand). Oh yeah lets call this game football.
Hmm, what is more logical Version A or Version B. I think Version A....