About 85,200 results
Open links in new tab
  1. Winograd schema challenge - Wikipedia

    Designed to be an improvement on the Turing test, it is a multiple-choice test that employs questions of a very specific structure: they are instances of what are called Winograd …

  2. The Winograd Schema Challenge - New York University

    A Winograd schema is a pair of sentences that differ in only one or two words and that contain an ambiguity that is resolved in opposite ways in the two sentences and requires the use of world …

  3. Home - Wingrad K-8 School

    At Harold S. Winograd, we education and empower every child to become well-rounded learners through a supportive and inclusive environment where we strive to uphold the highest …

  4. Winograd based convolutions. To provide a baseline method, a naive convolution algorithm was also introduced and compared with. The comparison was conducted in both 1D and 2D …

  5. Terry Winograd home page - Google Sites

    Terry Winograd is Professor Emeritus in the Computer Science Department at Stanford University. During his 40 years of teaching and research he created and directed the Human …

  6. Liu et al. “Efficient Sparse-Winograd Convolutional Neural Networks”, submitted to ICLR 2017 workshop

  7. Terry Winograd's Profile | Stanford Profiles

    Professor Winograd's focus is on human-computer interaction design and the design of technologies for development. He directs the teaching programs and HCI research in the …

  8. What we propose in this paper is a variant of the RTE that we call the Winograd Schema (or WS) challenge. It requires subjects to answer binary questions, but without depending on an explicit …

  9. The defeat of the Winograd Schema Challenge - ScienceDirect

    Dec 1, 2023 · In this paper, we review the history of the Winograd Schema Challenge and discuss the lasting contributions of the flurry of research that has taken place on the WSC in the last …

  10. ErnestSDavis/winograd_wsc · Datasets at Hugging Face

    A Winograd schema is a pair of sentences that differ in only one or two words and that contain an ambiguity that is resolved in opposite ways in the two sentences and requires the use of world …