With the growing scare of the deadly coronavirus, companies in China are pushing hard to limit its spread. In one such effort, the countryβs leading search engine Baidu has open-sourced an AI model to detect people not wearing face masks.
As coronavirus can spread through close contact with an infected person via their coughs, sneezes, or respiratory droplets, China has made it mandatory to wear face masks in several regions. People are instructed to wear masks in public places such as restaurants, shopping malls, and public transport.
[Read: How Chinese tech giants are assisting in the battle against coronavirus with AI]
Itβs quite hard for authorities to catch people not wearing masks in large crowds. Thatβs where Baiduβs tool will be useful. The company said it had trained the model on more than 100,000 images to achieve prediction accuracy of 96.5%.
As many factories and businesses in China have resumed work after the Lunar New Year holiday, itβs important for companies to identify people not wearing masks to limit the spread of the virus.
While Baidu claims this is a one-of-a-kind AI model, itβs not that unique given how the company has developed plenty of face detection models in the past.
According to the World Health Organization (WHO), over 51,000 confirmed cases have been registered in China, with death toll crossing 1,600.
Last week, the Chinese government launched an app to help people know if they have come in close contact with anyone affected by the virus.
Companies in China are trying to provide tools and funding to fuel research to find the deadly virusβ cure. Earlier this month, Baidu and e-commerce giant Alibaba open-sourced AI models for university and medical centers to improve prediction times for RNA structure of the virus.
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