A.I. fail as robot TV camera follows bald head instead of soccer ball

While artificial intelligence (A.I.) has clearly made astonishing strides in recent years, the technology is still susceptible to the occasional fail.

Take this recent soccer match in Scotland between Inverness Caledonian Thistle and Ayr United.

Recommended Videos

With stadiums closed to fans due to the coronavirus pandemic, Inverness recently decided to start livestreaming its games. Instead of employing a human camera operator, it opted instead to use an A.I.-powered robot camera designed to automatically follow the soccer ball.

But the game had hardly got underway when it became apparent that the robot camera was having trouble telling the difference between the shiny round soccer ball and the assistant referee’s shiny round head.

As a result, the camera kept panning toward the assistant referee’s bald head instead of the ball, causing much annoyance among fans watching at home, each of whom had paid 10 British pounds (about $13) to watch the game (or bald head, as it turned out).

According to local news media, fans wasted little time in venting their frustration online, with some demanding that match officials wear wigs or hats if the robot camera is used for future games.

One fan even took the time to cobble together a bunch of clips showing “the real highlights” of the Inverness/Ayr clash, which, incidentally, ended in a 1-1 draw. The video (top) shows the A.I. camera constantly drifting toward the assistant referee’s hairless pate, with the all-important ball apparently less ball-like than the match official’s noggin.

There are brief moments where it seems as if the camera has finally worked out what to do, but then it suddenly switches direction and moves once again toward the oblivious match official.

Digital Trends has reached out to Pixellot for more information on why its technology failed to tell the difference between a ball and a bald head and we will update this article when we hear back.

Editors' Recommendations

Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Facebook builds virtual homes to train A.I. agents in realistic environments

Researchers at Facebook, which is no stranger to artificial intelligence, have created Habitat, a platform that allows A.I. agents to rapidly learn about the physical world by living in realistic environments within virtual homes.

Teaching A.I.-powered robots to accomplish tasks within the real world takes a significant amount of time. While it may be possible to have actual robots move about in physical spaces for their training, it can take hundreds of hours, an even years, for the A.I. agents to learn how to move from one place to another, determine objects, and answer questions about their surroundings.

Read more
The Google Pixel 8a’s 6 biggest upgrades over the Pixel 7a

The Google Pixel 8a has just launched, and it comes with many upgrades that Pixel fans have been hoping for. These include some attractive new design flourishes, beefed-up hardware, a longer-lasting battery, and a higher-end display. You also get all the software features that make the Pixel series so appealing, including seven years of OS and security updates and Gemini Nano for more AI features.

But how does all of this compare to the already great Pixel 7a? Here’s a breakdown of the Google Pixel 8a’s six biggest upgrades over the Pixel 7a. For a closer look at all of the differences between the two phones, see our Pixel 8a vs. Pixel 7a comparison.
The Tensor G3 chip

Read more
Intel’s next-gen desktop chips may embrace these two major changes

Intel Arrow Lake is said to be coming out later this year, but the leaks have been scarce -- until today. According to Benchlife, Intel is readying 13 new processors, but forget any mentions of a 15th-gen CPU -- these chips all follow Intel's new branding and will be dubbed the Intel Core Ultra 200 series. That’s the first big change. What else is new, other than the name? If Benchlife is correct, the loss of hyperthreading will be the other notable difference.

Arrow Lake CPUs will be the first desktop generation to follow Intel's new naming scheme, and thus, the first under the new Core Ultra umbrella. Meteor Lake paved the way, but those are laptop chips, whereas Arrow Lake processors are coming to desktops. This includes the Core Ultra 200 K-series, which encompasses the unlocked versions of CPUs that have a processor base power (PBP) of 125 watts, as well as the locked Core Ultra 200 non-K variant that maxes out at 65 watts.

Read more