Will AI revolutionize professional soccer recruitment?

When Major League Soccer (MLS) announced plans to deploy AI-powered tools in its recruiting program starting at the tail end of this year, the eyebrows of skeptics were raised. The MLS will be working with London-based startup ai.io, and its ‘aiScout’ app to help the league discover amateur players around the world. This unprecedented collaboration is the first time the MLS will use artificial intelligence in its previously gatekept recruiting program, forcing many soccer enthusiasts and AI fans to reckon with the question: has artificial intelligence finally entered the mainstream in the professional soccer industry?

There is no doubt that professional sports have been primed for the potential impact of artificial intelligence. Innovations have the potential to transform the way we consume and analyze games from both an administrative and fan standpoint. For soccer specifically, there are opportunities for live game analytics, match outcome modeling, ball tracking, player recruitment, and even injury predicting — the opportunities are seemingly endless.

“I think that we’re at the beginning of a tremendously sophisticated use of AI and advanced analytics to understand and predict human behaviors,” Joel Shapiro, Northwestern University professor at the Kellogg School of Management said. Amid the wave, some experts believe the disruption of the professional soccer industry by AI is timely. It’s no secret that soccer is the most commonly played sport in the world. With 240 million registered players globally and billions of fans, FIFA is currently made up of 205 member associations with over 300,000 clubs, according to the Library of Congress. Just days into the 64-game tournament, FIFA officials said that the Women’s World Cup in Australia and New Zealand had already broken attendance records.

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The need for more players and more talent taking on the big stage has kept college recruiting organizations like Sports Recruiting USA (SRUSA) busy. “We’ve got staff all over the world, predominantly in the US …everyone is always looking for players,” Chris Cousins, the founder and head of operations at SRUSA said. Cousins said he is personally excited about the potential impact of artificial intelligence on his company and, in fact, he is not threatened by the implementation of predictive analysis impacting SRUSA’s bottom line. “It probably will replace scouts,” Cousins said, but at the same time, he said he believes the deployment of AI will make things more efficient. “It will basically streamline resources … which will save organizations money.” Cousins shared that SRUSA has already started dabbling with AI, even if only in a modest way. It collaborated with a company called Veo that deploys drones that follow players and collect video for scouts to analyze later. 

Luis Cortell, senior recruiting coach for men’s soccer for NCSA College Recruiting, is a little less bullish, but still believes AI can be an asset. “Right now, soccer involves more of a feel for the player, and an understanding of the game, and there aren’t any success metrics for college performance. While AI won’t fully fill that gap, there is an opportunity to help provide additional context.”

At the same time, people in the industry should be wary of idealizing AI as a godsend. “People expect AI to be amazing, to not make errors or if it makes errors, it makes errors rarely,” Shapiro said. The fact is, predictive models will always make mistakes but both researchers and investors alike want to make sure that AI innovations in the space can make “fewer errors and less expensive errors” than the ones made by human beings.

But ultimately, Shapiro agrees with Cousins. He believes artificial intelligence will replace some payrolls for sure. “Might it replace talent scouts? Absolutely,” he said. However, the ultimate decision-makers of how resources are being used will probably not be replaced by AI for some time. Contrary to both perspectives, Richard Felton-Thomas, director of sports sciences and chief operating officer at ai.io, said the technology being developed and used by the MLS will not replace scouts: “Scouts are super important to the mentality side, the personality side, you’ve still got to watch humans behave in their sporting arena to really talent ID them.”

Photo by Rob Hart

When the aiScout app launches in the coming weeks and is used by the MLS later this year, players will be able to take videos of themselves performing specific drills. Those will then be uploaded and linked to the scout version of the app, where talent recruiters working for specific teams can discover players based on whatever criteria they choose. For example, a scout could look for a goalie with a specific height and kick score. Think of it as a cross between a social media website and a search engine. Once a selection is made, a scout would determine whether or not they should go watch a player in person before making any final recruitment decisions, Felton-Thomas explained.

“The main AI actually happens less around the scoring and more around the video processing and the video tracking,” Felton-Thomas said. “Sport happens at 200 frames per second type speeds, right? So you can’t just have any old tracking model. It will not track the human fast enough.” The AI algorithms that have been developed to analyze video content can translate human movements into what makes up a player’s overall performance metrics and capabilities. 

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These ‘performance metrics’ can include biographical data, video highlights and club-specific benchmarks that can be made by recruiters. The company said in a statement that the platform’s AI technology is also able to score and compare the individual players’ “technical, athletic, cognitive and psychometric ability.” Additionally, the AI can generate feedback based on benchmarked ratings from the range of the club trials available. The FIFA Innovation Programme, the experimental arm of the association that tests and engages with new products that want to enter the professional soccer market, reported that ai.io’s AI-powered tools demonstrate a 97 percent accuracy level when compared to current gold standards.

Beyond the practical applications of AI-powered tools to streamline some processes at SRUSA, Cousins said that he recognizes a lot of the talent recruitment process is “very opinion based” and informed by potential bias. ai.io’s talent recruitment app, because it is accessible to any player with a smartphone, broadens the MLS’ reach to disadvantaged populations. The larger goal is that aiScout will potentially disrupt bias from continuing to play a huge role in who gets what opportunity, or at least in the pre-screening process. Now, a scout can make the call to see a player in real life based on objective data related to how a player can perform physically. “The clubs are starting to realize we can’t just rely on someone’s opinion,” Felton-Thomas said. Of course, it’s not an end-all-be-all for bias, considering preferential humans are the ones coding the AI. There is no complete expunging of favoritism from the equation, but it is one step in the right direction.

aiScout could open doors for players from remote or disadvantaged communities that don’t necessarily have the means or opportunity to be seen by scouts in cups and tournaments. “Somebody super far in Alaska or Texas or whatever, who can’t afford to play for a big club may never get seen by the right people but with this platform there, boom. They’re going straight to the eyes of the right people,” Cousins said about ai.io’s app.

The MLS wrote in a statement that ai.io’s technology “eliminates barriers like cost, geography and time commitment that traditionally limit the accessibility of talent discovery programs.” Felton-Thomas said it is more important to understand that ai.io will “democratize” the recruiting process for the MLS, ensuring physical skills are the most important metric when leagues and clubs are deciding where to invest their money. “What we’re looking to do is give the clubs a higher confidence level when they’re making these decisions on who to sign and who to watch.” By implementing the AI-powered app, recruitment timelines are also expected to be cut.

Silvia Ferrari, professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering at Cornell and ​​Associate Dean for cross-campus engineering research, who runs the university’s ‘Laboratory for Intelligent Systems and Controls’ said she couldn’t agree more. AI has the potential to complement the expertise of recruiters while also helping, “eliminate the bias that sometimes coaches might have for a particular player or a particular team,” Ferrari said. Adjacent to this subject, algorithms developed in Ferrari’s lab can accurately predict the in-game actions of volleyball players with more than 80% accuracy. Now the lab, which has been working on AI-powered predictive tools for the past three years, is collaborating with Cornell’s Big Red men’s ice hockey team to expand the project’s applications. Ferrari and her team have trained the algorithm to extract data from videos of games and then use that to make predictions about game stats and player performance when shown a new set of data.

LISC lab

“I think what we’re doing is, like, very easily applicable to soccer,” Ferrari said. She said the only reason her lab is not focused on soccer is because the fields are so large that her team’s cameras could not always deliver easily analyzed recordings. There is also the struggle with predicting trajectory and tracking the players, she explained. However, she said in hockey, the challenges are similar enough, but because there are fewer players and the fields are smaller, so the variables are more manageable to tackle.

While the focus at Ferrari’s lab may not be soccer, she is convinced that research in the predictive AI space has made it “so much more promising to develop AI in sports and made the progress much faster.” The algorithms developed by Ferrari’s lab have been able to help teams analyze different strategies and therefore help coaches identify the strengths and weaknesses of particular players and opponents. “I think we’re making very fast progress,” Ferrari said.

LISC lab

The next areas Ferrari plans to try to apply her lab’s research to include scuba diving and skydiving. However, Ferrari admits there are some technical barriers that need to be overcome by researchers. “The current challenge is real-time analytics,” she said. A lot of that challenge is based on the fact that the technology is only capable of making predictions based on historical data. Meaning, if there is a shortage of historical data-there is a limit to what the tech can predict. Beyond technical limitations, Felton-Thomas said implementing AI in the real world is expensive and without the right partnerships, like the ones made with Intel and AWS, it would not have been possible fiscally.

Felton-Thomas said ai.io expects “tens of millions of users over the next couple of years.” And the company attributes that expected growth to partnerships with the right clubs, like Chelsea FC and Burnley FC in the UK, and the MLS in the United States. And while aiScout was initially designed for soccer, the company touts that its core functionalities can be adapted for use in other sports.

LISC lab

But despite ai.io’s projections for growth and all the buzz around AI, the technology is still a long way from being fully trusted. From a technology standpoint, Ferrari said “there’s still a lot of work to be done” and a lot of the need for improvement is not just based on problems with feeding algorithms historical data. Predictive models need to be smart enough to adapt to the ever-changing variables in the current. On top of that, public skepticism of artificial intelligence is still rampant in the mainstream, let alone in soccer.

“If the sport changes a little bit, if the way in which players are used changes a little bit, if treatment plans for mid-career athletes change, whatever it is, all of a sudden, our predictions are less likely to be good,” Shapiro said. But he’s confident that the current models will prove valuable and informative. At least for a little while.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/will-ai-revolutionize-professional-soccer-recruitment-130045118.html?src=rss 

Sony’s WH-XB910 ANC headphones fall to a new all-time low

If you’ve got a trip coming up to close out the summer and are dreading the idea of hearing a crying baby or loud group the whole way there, then you’re in luck: Sony’s WH-XB910N Extra Bass Noise Cancelling headphones in Black are currently at an all-time low price of $105, down from $250. Yes, a wonderfully large 58 percent discount means you can block out fellow travelers (or even your family at home) and have enough money left over for an upgrade, or to buy a second as a gift. The cheapest we’ve seen them previously is $123, so it’s a significant drop. Just be aware that the discount appears to only show up for certain accounts; some may see a discounted price of $148 instead.

Sony’s WH-XB910N ANC headphones are a solid option — especially at this price point — that provide you with nice mid- and high-range sounds, great noise canceling and a respectable 30 hours of battery life. If you forget to juice them up, a 10-minute charge will give you a solid four and a half hours. The WH-XB910N headphones are also equipped with a powerful bass, Alexa and Google Assistant voice control support, and Sony’s 360 Reality Audio, which works with streaming services like Amazon Music HD. 

If you’re on the go and want to be a bit more aware of your surroundings, the headphones have an ambient setting that will give you a bit more perception. Plus, they can amplify your voice if you pass down a busy street while on a call. Once you’re done, just tuck them into the included carrying case, and off you go. 

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This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/sonys-wh-xb910-anc-headphones-fall-to-a-new-all-time-low-131556093.html?src=rss 

Billie Eilish Honors Angus Cloud With ‘Euphoria’ Song Performance At Lollapalooza: Watch

The ‘Happier Than Ever’ popstar dedicated a performance of ‘Never Felt So Alone’ to the late actor, who died unexepctedly at 25.

The ‘Happier Than Ever’ popstar dedicated a performance of ‘Never Felt So Alone’ to the late actor, who died unexepctedly at 25. 

Tom Brady & Irina Shayk Were In ‘Their Own Little World’ On Secret Date Night: Report

Tom Brady and Irina Shayk reportedly went on a romantic sushi date one week after their first rendezvous made headlines in July.

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TikTok will let European users decide whether they want a personalized For You Page

TikTok is undergoing massive changes for users in the European Union in order to meet the August 28th deadline the region’s authorities gave companies to comply with the Digital Services Act (DSA). Perhaps the biggest change users will encounter is the ability to decide whether or not to let algorithms power their For You page (FYP). “Soon,” the service announced, users in the region will be able to switch off personalization. If they do, then their FYP will be populated with popular videos within their location and from around the world instead of content tailored to them. 

When they search for any subject in particular, the results will also be comprised of popular videos in their region and content in their preferred language. They can still head to their Following and Friends feeds to see posts by people they follow, but both will now show a chronological timeline instead of one based on their profile. Under the DSA, “providers of very large online platforms,” of which TikTok is included, are required to to ensure that users can “enjoy alternative options which are not based on profiling” as part of their “recommender systems.” That means they have to offer an option that presents their content to users in a way that doesn’t use their personal data. 

As TechCrunch notes, it’ll be an enormous shift for TikTok, seeing as most of its success is credited to the algorithm that powers its For You Page. Its scrollable format filled with videos targeting specific users is what makes the app so addicting

In addition to introducing an alternative FYP, TikTok is rolling out an additional reporting option for European users for content they believe shouldn’t be allowed on the platform. If the service decides that it doesn’t violate its general guidelines upon review, a new dedicated team of moderators will then take a look at it to see if it violates laws in the region. TikTok can then restrict access to the reported video within that country or region only. 

The social network will also start giving users in Europe more details about its content moderation decisions, such as why posts with false information aren’t eligible for recommendation. Finally, it said that it will no longer serve personalized advertising to users in Europe ages 13 to 17 based on their activities. 

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/tiktok-will-let-european-users-decide-whether-they-want-a-personalized-for-you-page-120548491.html?src=rss 

Engadget Podcast: Taking down ‘X,’ plus a week of AI and EV news

While our reviewers spend time testing the numerous Samsung devices that were just announced, this episode Cherlynn and Sam dive into the relatively slow week in tech. Of course, we can’t escape the onslaught of news coming from X-Twitter-Musk land, just like how residents from a building across from the company’s San Francisco headquarters were unable to escape from blinding lights this weekend. We also go over some updates from Meta and Google and discover why Cherlynn loves clowns.

Listen below or subscribe on your podcast app of choice. If you’ve got suggestions or topics you’d like covered on the show, be sure to email us or drop a note in the comments! And be sure to check out our other podcasts, the Morning After and Engadget News!

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Topics

This week in X/Twitter news: A disturbing strobe-light of a logo and hiding your checkmark – 1:21

Tesla under investigation for steering and battery range issues – 11:31

Half of Meta Threads users are now inactive – 24:16

Meta may be working on an Abraham Lincoln AI chatbot – 29:39

Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman suggests the iPhone 15 could come with USB-C charging – 37:58

Working on – 54:13

Pop culture picks – 56:47

Credits
Hosts: Cherlynn Low and Sam Rutherford
Producer: Ben Ellman
Music: Dale North and Terrence O’Brien

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/engadget-podcast-taking-down-x-plus-a-week-of-ai-and-ev-news-123048688.html?src=rss 

Meghan Markle Dazzles In Strapless Dress For Dinner Date With Prince Harry Ahead Of 42nd Birthday: Photos

After laying low for most of the summer, Meghan Markle and Prince Harry grabbed dinner in Montecito, California to celebrate her birthday.

After laying low for most of the summer, Meghan Markle and Prince Harry grabbed dinner in Montecito, California to celebrate her birthday. 

Taylor Swift Hugs Kobe Bryant’s Daughter Bianka, 6, & Gives Her ’22’ Hat In Sweet Concert Moment

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The Morning After: Tesla jailbreak could enable Full Self-Driving for free

Security researchers believe they have found a hardware exploit to unlock upgrades to a Tesla that normally require plenty of extra cash. By messing with the voltage of the infotainment system, they were able to inject their code, bypassing its normal security. That enabled them to access personal data, including GPS tracking and call logs, as well as the car’s encryption key. That, the researchers claim, could be the key to unlocking paywalled features, like the mode known as Full Self-Driving, which you presently have to pay extra to use.

That’s not the only slice of bad news on Tesla’s breakfast plate today; it also stands accused of fraud. A recent Reuters expose alleges the car company was far too generous with its range estimates, and that it had quietly set up a team to stymie range-related complaints. In the wake of that report, three Californians have proposed a class action lawsuit accusing Tesla of false advertising. If successful, the lawsuit will cover every Tesla owner in the state, which wouldn’t be as much of a problem if California hadn’t taken the EV company to its heart.

– Daniel Cooper

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Google’s Pixel Tablet with Charging Speaker gets its first big discount

If you’ve been eyeing the new Google Pixel Tablet but didn’t want to drop half a grand on it, today might be your lucky day. The smart home-cum-mobile device is currently having its first big sale, with its 128GB model down from $499 to $439 — a 12 percent discount. If you want a bit more storage, the Google Pixel Tablet’s 256GB option is 13 percent off, dropping its price from $599 to $519. 

The Google Pixel Tablet first came on the scene in June and scored an 85 in our review. We were especially impressed with its included charging speaker dock and smart home features, such as how easy it was to see no matter how light the room was (while still not being too bright). The Pixel Tablet is Google’s first model with the Google Tensor G2 chip built in and has an average battery life of 11 hours. It also has an 11-inch screen with 2560×1600 resolution, giving you solid quality while on video calls or watching shows through Chromecast. Speaking of video calls, the camera is unfortunately not your friend on the Pixel Tablet, with an awkward angle only slightly improved by an auto-framing feature — but it’s exclusive to Google Teams. 

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This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/googles-pixel-tablet-with-charging-speaker-gets-its-first-big-discount-094504760.html?src=rss 

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