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Could Robot Writers Take Over Sportswriters' Jobs?

No one has ever confused Woody Paige with Arthur Rimbaud. And there's a good reason: daily sportswriting is, by definition, Mojave-dry. Beat writers covering a Major League Baseball team, for instance, have to find a way to churn out stimulating articles daily, over the course of a Homeric 162-game regular season. Understandably, then, the writing tends toward the cliché-ridden and the formulaic -- so formulaic, perhaps, that even a robot could do it.

That's what some students at the Intelligent Information Laboratory at Northwestern University are arguing. Their project, 'StatsMonkey,' relies upon 'crawlers,' which combine key statistics from a game with frequently used sportswriting lingo in order to create their own auto-article. According to the StatsMonkey website, the algorithm first analyzes "changes in Win Probability and Game Scores" to "pick out the key plays and players from any individual game." Then, the robot consults a library of "narrative arcs" to structure the story, determining whether the game was a come-from-behind win, a blowout, or a nail-biter. The two are then combined to form the story, which can be narrated, interestingly, from the perspective of either team's hometown. To demonstrate, the kids had the robot write about an October 11th playoff game between the Boston Red Sox and Anaheim Angels. And, as the New York Times reports, the resultant article wasn't all that bad (even if it did kinda miss the sorta important fact that the Angels swept the Red Sox).

We don't think it's time to sound the death knell on beat sportswriting just yet. Yeah, the demonstration was pretty impressive, and we can definitely see how it could be used to at least supplement or assist individual writers. But sports is much more than box scores and results, especially in a contemporary sportscape where editorializing personalities like Bill Simmons or Rick Reilly are garnering a far greater readership. Every single sporting event has a meta-narrative that has to be taken into account. For instance, there's the fact that, until recently, every Alex Rodriguez postseason at bat was haunted by the spectre of his historical chokes. And that's not to mention his salacious and scandalous personal life. From what we've seen, this breed of robot can't yet claim to fill that role. And we think that's a pretty Major League detail. [From: The New York TImes]

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