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Kaggle is a data science competition platform and online community for data scientists and machine learning practitioners under Google LLC.Kaggle enables users to find and publish datasets, explore and build models in a web-based data science environment, work with other data scientists and machine learning engineers, and enter competitions to solve data science challenges.
Anthony John Goldbloom (born 21 June 1983) is the founder and former CEO of Kaggle, a data science competition platform which has used predictive modelling competitions to solve data problems for companies, such as NASA, Wikipedia, [1] Ford and Deloitte.
Research has been completed on how competition can improve research performance. Companies like JPMorgan Chase also run internal contests involving large numbers of employees. [2] Examples of data science competition platforms include Bitgrit, [3] Correlation One, Kaggle, InnoCentive, Microprediction, [4] AIcrowd, [5] and Alibaba Tianchi. [6]
Annual competition organized and sponsored by Google from 2003 until its cancellation in 2023. [9] 32,702 (2022) [10] International Collegiate Programming Contest (ICPC) [11] ICPC Foundation university students Team competition for university students, the contest consists of many regional rounds that conclude in a world final organized yearly.
The Intel AI Global Impact Festival is an international annual competition held by Intel Corporation [2] for school, and college students with prizes upwards of $15,000. It is about artificial intelligence technology. There are two age brackets in this competition, 13-18 Age Group, and 18 and Above Age Group.
10-second sound snippets from YouTube videos, and an ontology of over 500 labels. 128-d PCA'd VGG-ish features every 1 second. 2,084,320 Text (CSV) and TensorFlow Record files Classification 2017 [148] J. Gemmeke et al., Google Bird Audio Detection challenge Audio from environmental monitoring stations, plus crowdsourced recordings 17,000+
The Makridakis Competitions (also known as the M Competitions or M-Competitions) are a series of open competitions to evaluate and compare the accuracy of different time series forecasting methods. They are organized by teams led by forecasting researcher Spyros Makridakis and were first held in 1982. [1] [2] [3] [4]
Competition-based learning (CBL) is a student-centered pedagogy that combines project-based learning and competitions. [1] This can sometimes be referred to as game-based learning as well, which is different than gamification. [citation needed] CBL also utilizes team-based learning (or Active Collaborative Learning, ACL) and problem-based ...