Berliner Boersenzeitung - AI helps Latin scholars decipher ancient Roman texts

EUR -
AED 4.235108
AFN 72.638695
ALL 95.986116
AMD 435.092592
ANG 2.063949
AOA 1057.292369
ARS 1577.236365
AUD 1.673475
AWG 2.078266
AZN 1.958134
BAM 1.955386
BBD 2.320668
BDT 141.373711
BGN 1.970817
BHD 0.435957
BIF 3424.38207
BMD 1.152991
BND 1.480725
BOB 7.979516
BRL 6.049975
BSD 1.152186
BTN 108.575339
BWP 15.841123
BYN 3.460157
BYR 22598.615681
BZD 2.317349
CAD 1.59725
CDF 2635.149736
CHF 0.916506
CLF 0.027072
CLP 1068.948607
CNY 7.966185
CNH 7.980055
COP 4255.61911
CRC 534.200663
CUC 1.152991
CUP 30.554251
CVE 110.542933
CZK 24.511426
DJF 204.909943
DKK 7.471979
DOP 68.605777
DZD 153.395731
EGP 60.817599
ERN 17.294859
ETB 181.192506
FJD 2.594811
FKP 0.862247
GBP 0.865314
GEL 3.107286
GGP 0.862247
GHS 12.636424
GIP 0.862247
GMD 84.719455
GNF 10120.377686
GTQ 8.814361
GYD 241.055175
HKD 9.023247
HNL 30.577003
HRK 7.535828
HTG 150.891941
HUF 388.338432
IDR 19510.445669
ILS 3.602059
IMP 0.862247
INR 108.645093
IQD 1510.417681
IRR 1514222.549315
ISK 143.339936
JEP 0.862247
JMD 181.081615
JOD 0.817484
JPY 184.182756
KES 149.773716
KGS 100.828779
KHR 4629.257123
KMF 492.326899
KPW 1037.758177
KRW 1739.332384
KWD 0.35421
KYD 0.960221
KZT 555.084372
LAK 25063.132529
LBP 103250.307387
LKR 362.372615
LRD 211.803486
LSL 19.658594
LTL 3.404482
LVL 0.697433
LYD 7.35573
MAD 10.768576
MDL 20.238324
MGA 4813.735514
MKD 61.653053
MMK 2421.261549
MNT 4132.119635
MOP 9.284814
MRU 46.246593
MUR 53.751971
MVR 17.825775
MWK 2001.591211
MXN 20.574308
MYR 4.605027
MZN 73.687834
NAD 19.658789
NGN 1598.632905
NIO 42.337441
NOK 11.175356
NPR 173.720942
NZD 2.002185
OMR 0.443309
PAB 1.152181
PEN 3.988767
PGK 4.968807
PHP 69.448107
PKR 321.972295
PLN 4.27801
PYG 7540.995323
QAR 4.215912
RON 5.097026
RSD 117.441351
RUB 93.822176
RWF 1683.36627
SAR 4.326033
SBD 9.272321
SCR 15.995702
SDG 692.947394
SEK 10.884917
SGD 1.482394
SHP 0.865042
SLE 28.306224
SLL 24177.648784
SOS 658.93198
SRD 43.308612
STD 23864.577457
STN 24.616349
SVC 10.082038
SYP 128.492581
SZL 19.658268
THB 38.014217
TJS 11.02665
TMT 4.046997
TND 3.370773
TOP 2.776124
TRY 51.145977
TTD 7.820546
TWD 36.875174
TZS 2968.95063
UAH 50.55856
UGX 4286.184377
USD 1.152991
UYU 46.710504
UZS 14054.955391
VES 537.314539
VND 30382.455194
VUV 137.232784
WST 3.170183
XAF 655.832201
XAG 0.01708
XAU 0.000263
XCD 3.116015
XCG 2.076605
XDR 0.813367
XOF 653.172449
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.161365
ZAR 19.752487
ZMK 10378.307533
ZMW 21.632883
ZWL 371.262501
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • CMSC

    -0.0900

    22.82

    -0.39%

  • NGG

    -1.8900

    82.4

    -2.29%

  • VOD

    -0.0900

    14.63

    -0.62%

  • RYCEF

    -0.6000

    15.3

    -3.92%

  • AZN

    -3.7400

    183.4

    -2.04%

  • BTI

    -0.1900

    58.26

    -0.33%

  • RELX

    -0.4000

    32.07

    -1.25%

  • GSK

    -0.7600

    53.94

    -1.41%

  • RIO

    -1.7500

    85.79

    -2.04%

  • CMSD

    0.0700

    22.75

    +0.31%

  • BCE

    -0.0200

    25.47

    -0.08%

  • BCC

    -0.3600

    74.29

    -0.48%

  • BP

    0.7600

    46.17

    +1.65%

  • JRI

    -0.0300

    12.07

    -0.25%

AI helps Latin scholars decipher ancient Roman texts
AI helps Latin scholars decipher ancient Roman texts / Photo: Andreas SOLARO - AFP/File

AI helps Latin scholars decipher ancient Roman texts

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.

Text size:

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 kilometres 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 colour or its shape," she explained.

"To solve the puzzle, you need to use that information to find the pieces that connect to it."

- 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 -- five percent 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 analyse 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 percent 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."

(H.Schneide--BBZ)