
What's the word you hear?
Complete the sentences. Listen and write the missing word. There are up to 10 questions.
AI works out secrets of ancient scroll - 4th March 2024
A team of 3 students are celebrating a $700,000 prize win after restoring part of an ancient scroll using artificial intelligence (AI). Being able to read the scroll's secrets appeared impossible since the papyrus had been burnt during a volcanic eruption and would crumble into pieces if unrolled.
The winners, Egyptian PhD candidate, Youssef Nader, SpaceX intern Luke Farritor from the US and robotics student Julian Schilliger from Switzerland, teamed up online. They restored 5 percent of the ancient Greek written on the 2,000 year old document.
The scroll is one of 600 discovered in the 18th century in a Herculaneum villa. The city, alongside Pompeii, had been devastated when Mount Vesuvius erupted in 79 CE, covering both cities in ash and lava.
The Vesuvius Challenge, established in 2023, pledged a million dollars in prizes to those who succeeded in revealing the scroll's secrets. Sparking interest among the global AI community, the organisers supplied CT scans of the scrolls from which participants created 3D models. However, the scans lacked details such as colour, meaning that participants needed another method for identifying ink marks.
The breakthrough came when one participant discovered a crackling pattern on one segment. Others then trained AI algorithms to identify the crackles elsewhere.
Eventually, Farritor discovered a word, 'porphyras' or purple, then partnered with Nader and Schilliger, working long hours, to decipher over 2000 letters. Nader explained that "The adrenaline rush is what kept us going."
Their efforts revealed five percent of that text's content, which focused on pleasure, comparing music to food and drink. Organisers called it "a 2000-year-old blog post about how to enjoy life."
Following this success, the organisers have issued a new challenge: to read 90 percent of four scanned scrolls.
Expert in antiquity Robert Fowler highlighted that the texts "could completely rewrite the history of key periods of the ancient world."
Complete the sentences. Listen and write the missing word. There are up to 10 questions.
Read the sentences. Put them in the same order as the news report. There are 4 sentences.
Complete the sentences. Select the correct preposition. There are up to 4 questions.
Make sentences. Select each word in the correct order. There are up to 3 questions.
Complete the sentences. Listen and write the missing phrase. There are up to 5 questions.
Complete the sentences. Select the correct verb. There are 5 questions.
Read the sentences. Find the spaces between the words. There are up to 5 questions.
Read the sentences. Find the missing capital letters. There are 5 sentences.
Put the sentence parts in the correct order. Each sentence is in 4 pieces. There are up to 5 questions.
Answer questions about the news report. Select the correct answer from 4 options. There are 5 questions.
The letters of one word are in the wrong order. Read the sentence. Spell the word correctly. There are up to 10 questions.
Complete the sentences. Select the correct vowel for each space. There are up to 5 sentences.
Complete the sentences. Select the correct word. There are up to 5 questions.
Check how fast you can read this news report. Choose your speed and read each line of text. Practise to improve your reading speed.
Check how well you can understand spoken English. Choose a speed and listen to the report. Practise listening faster and slower to help you improve.
Listen to the newsreader read out each line and then practise saying it. Record your own voice line by line and submit your voiceover.
Either you did not allow SensationsEnglish to access your email address or your social account doesn't have that, please provide it here.
By clicking “Create Account” above you are accepting our Terms of Service & Privacy Policy.