What Are the Odds? This Semantic-Powered Site Tells You
Jennifer Zaino You’ve heard of the Book of Love – now there’s also a Book of Odds.
Launched in mid-October, the site claims to contain hundreds of thousands of carefully researched Odds Statements, each evaluated and graded for its underlying data quality. The site uses Cambridge Semantics’ semantic middleware technology to structure the data to help users in their searches for odds statement matches. Currently the site has four topic portals – Health & Illness, Accidents & Death, Relationships & Society, and Daily Life & Activities, each with their own sub-topics. Users can search by keywords, key-numbers (finding events of a given likelihood through whole number searches), and visually. Semanticweb.com thought this presented lots of possibilities for whiling away a morning, so we thought we’d share with you some of the interesting odds we came across while perusing the site. Check them out on the jump, right below the screen shot of the Book of Odds home page.
Searching on dates in Relationships & Society, we learned there is a: ● One in 6.37 odds that a male MMORPG (massively multiplayer online role-playing game – and yes, we did have to look that up) player has ever physically dated someone he met through an MMORPG. Searching on 15,150, we learned that there is a 1 in 15,150 odds that: ● A male born in 1970 in the U.S. is named Chance (not sure what the odds are that he hates his summer-of-love parents for giving him that name); Searching on the topic ‘food’, we were directed to a number of related topics through a visual diagram. From there we could click to various sub-topic threads to learn: ● The odds a person in Maine will die from choking on food in a year are 1 in 310,400 (you’ve got to watch out for those lobster claws...) Book of Odds is a fun place to explore – though by no means a complete one yet (no results for keyword or odds searches on bankruptcy, for example – and after the year we’ve had!). But the site does claim higher missions than mere diversion. It hopes to become an established new reference source, increase the general understanding of probability, increase tolerance for uncertainty, unleash the human capability to calibrate probability, and help with tough decisions. It says each odds statement it uses has to meet standards including clarity and explicit source naming, and accuracy through careful selection and evaluation of credible sources. The site provides plenty of details on its mission and methodology, but there’s nothing wrong with just playing around – especially if you are an adult man aged 18 to 44, where the odds are 1 in 2.91 that you engage in some leisure-time activity. Email This Post |
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