Ví dụ về việc sử dụng Foldit trong Tiếng anh và bản dịch của chúng sang Tiếng việt
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Will Foldit ever be open source?
And thus began Foldit(Hand 2010).
Figure 5.8: Game screen for Foldit.
For more on FoldIt see, Cooper et al.
Figure 5.8: Game screen for Foldit.
From the perspective of the player, Foldit appears to be a puzzle(figure 5.8).
Foldit turns the process of protein folding into a game that can be played by anyone.
From the perspective of the player, Foldit appears to be a puzzle(figure 5.8).
In Foldit, the players are often listed as an author(Cooper et al. 2010; Khatib et al. 2011).
Or consider the case of David Baker,the biochemist working in Seattle developing Foldit.
The game, called Foldit, turns protein folding into a competitive event.
It is pretty cool that citizen scientists have labeled galaxies at Galaxy Zoo andfolded proteins at Foldit.
A new game, named Foldit, turns protein folding into a competitive sport.
But, open call projects can also involve participants who have no formal training,as was illustrated by Foldit, a protein folding game.
In Foldit, the players are often listed as an author(Cooper et al. 2010; Khatib et al. 2011).
Second, by some definitions of human computation(e.g., Ahn(2005)), Foldit should be considered a human computation project.
By this definition FoldIt- which I described in the section on open calls- could be considered a human computation project.
Second, by some definitions of human computation(e.g., Von Ahn(2005)), FoldIt should be considered a human computation project.
Foldit recently made a notable and major scientific discovery by deciphering the structure of the Mason-Pfizer monkey virus.
Although Peer-to-Patent may seem different than the Netflix Prize and Foldit, it has a similar structure in that solutions are easier to check than generate.
Foldit and the Netflix prize are different in many ways, but they both involve open calls for solutions that are easier to check than generate.
According to the definition proposed in Ahn(2005) Foldit- which I described in the section on open calls- could be considered a human computation project.
While watching these visualizations, Baker began to wonder whether it would be possible for humans to help in the process,and thus began Foldit, a creative and beautiful open call(Hand 2010).
In 2008, they created a game called FoldIt, in which a user gets a digital representation of protein and then begins to manipulate and fold the protein on the screen.
Rosetta@home aims to predict protein- protein docking and design new proteins with the help of about sixty thousand active volunteered computers processing at over 210 teraFLOPS on average as of July 29,2016.[4] Foldit, a Rosetta@Home videogame, aims to reach these goals with a crowdsourcing approach.
In fact, in a head-to-head competition between Foldit players and state-of-the-art algorithms, the players created better solutions for 5 out of 10 proteins(Cooper et al. 2010).
In fact, in a head-to-head competition topredict the structure of 10 specific proteins, Foldit players were able to beat state-of-the-art protein folding algorithms five times(Cooper et al. 2010).