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  2. Turnitin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turnitin

    Turnitin (stylized as turnitin) is an Internet-based similarity detection service run by the American company Turnitin, LLC, a subsidiary of Advance Publications. Founded in 1998, it sells its licenses to universities and high schools who then use the software as a service (SaaS) website to check submitted documents against its database and the ...

  3. Scribd - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scribd

    Scribd was called "the YouTube for documents", allowing anyone to self-publish on the site using its document reader. [4] The document reader turns PDFs, Word documents, and PowerPoints into Web documents that can be shared on any website that allows embeds. [8] In its first year, Scribd grew rapidly to 23.5 million visitors as of November 2008 ...

  4. Document AI - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Document_ai

    Document AI combines text data, which has a time dimension, with other types of data, such as the position of an address in a business letter, which is spatial. Historically in machine learning spatial data was analyzed using a convolutional neural network , and temporal data using a recurrent neural network .

  5. Information retrieval - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Information_retrieval

    In the case of document retrieval, queries can be based on full-text or other content-based indexing. Information retrieval is the science [1] of searching for information in a document, searching for documents themselves, and also searching for the metadata that describes data, and for databases of texts, images or sounds. Automated ...

  6. Literature review - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Literature_review

    The term can refer to a full scholarly paper or a section of a scholarly work such as books or articles. Either way, a literature review provides the researcher /author and the audiences with general information of an existing knowledge of a particular topic.

  7. Automatic summarization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Automatic_summarization

    Abstractive summarization methods generate new text that did not exist in the original text. [12] This has been applied mainly for text. Abstractive methods build an internal semantic representation of the original content (often called a language model), and then use this representation to create a summary that is closer to what a human might express.

  8. Why the Netflix true crime doc ‘What Jennifer Did’ is at the ...

    www.aol.com/news/why-netflix-true-crime-doc...

    A few days after the film’s release, Victor Tangermann, a writer for the tech publication Futurism argued that these two images of Pan “have all the hallmarks of an AI-generated photo ...

  9. Killian documents authenticity issues - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Killian_documents...

    Charles Johnson's animated GIF image comparing what CBS claimed to be a 1973-era typewritten memo with a 2004-era Microsoft Word document made with default settings. In the initial hours and days after the CBS broadcast, most of the criticism of the documents' authenticity centered on the fact that they did not look like typical typewritten documents and appeared very similar to documents ...