GPR-A wrote: ↑22 Feb 2020, 19:52
Do either of you watch Cricket? There are things that happen at much slower pace in a run out, but yet, there is "Third Umpire" to review video footage to accurately make a decision, despite the on field Umpire standing there gluing his eyes to watch the run out happen.
(begin off topic)
Run-out, for example, and most other 3rd umpire interventions are binary decisions, so it's not really a useful comparison here. Perhaps a more analogous situation would be an automated system for classifying if Muralitharan or Malinga, or a new bowler's novel action is legal.
My point was equally pragmatic. Imagine
you need to build an automated system for classifying if a new bolwing action 'more weird' than those two, are legal. First you would need to
identify a quantitative measures that encode all aspects of a legal bowling action, and then
engineer a system to classify it. On the other hand, an umpire who has watched bowlers their entire life has an internal mental classifier that would peform quite well at a first pass, and would be cheaper (free to build). It's not a perfect analogy, but it's not to bad.
So it is with watching cars on track. A life trained human has a pretty good model. It's better than noise, and it's error is probably better than an automated system initially.
(end off topic)