NY Times The idea is to harness technology to help reassemble more than 100,000
document fragments collected across 1,000 years that reveal details of
Jewish life along the Mediterranean, including marriage, medicine and
mysticism. For decades, scholars relied mainly on memory to match up
pieces of the Cairo genizah, a treasure trove of papers that include
works by the rabbinical scholar Maimonides, parts of Torah scrolls and
prayer books, reams of poetry and personal letters, contracts, and court
documents, even recipes (there is a particularly vile one for
honey-wine).
Now, for the first time, a sophisticated artificial intelligence program
running on a powerful computer network is conducting 4.5 trillion
calculations per second to vastly narrow down the possibilities.
“In one hour, the computer can compare 10 million pairs — 10 million
pairs is something a human being cannot do in a lifetime,” said Roni
Shweka, who has advanced degrees in both computers and Talmud and is
helping lead the effort. “It’s going to be a very powerful tool for
every researcher today that’s going to work on one fragment. In a few
seconds, he’ll be able to find the other fragments, like finding the
needle in the hay.”
The genizah project is part of a growing movement to unleash advanced technology on the humanities.
In recent years, geeks and poets have been collaborating on databases
and digital mapping that are transforming the study of history,
literature, music and more.[...]
The 320,000 pages and parts of pages — in Hebrew, Aramaic, and
Judeo-Arabic (Arabic transliterated into Hebrew letters) — were
scattered in 67 libraries and private collections around the world, only
a fraction of them collated and cataloged. More than 200 volumes and
thousands of academic papers have been published based on the material,
most focused on a single fragment or a few. Perhaps 4,000 have been
pieced together through a painstaking, expensive, exclusive process that
relied a lot on luck. [...]
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