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action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home4/scienrds/scienceandnerds/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6114Source: https:\/\/www.theverge.com\/2022\/6\/30\/23189572\/robot-umpires-major-league-baseball-2024<\/a> Two years from now, in baseball stadiums around the US, the umpire behind home plate might be little more than a mouthpiece for a robot. Major League Baseball plans to introduce robot umpires in the 2024 season, MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred told ESPN<\/em> this week<\/a>. He framed the change as a way to speed up games, but anyone who\u2019s watched baseball the last few years will tell you that a machine would almost certainly call balls and strikes better than the humans do.<\/p>\n There are two ways the \u201cAutomated Ball-Strike System,\u201d which is the technical term for these robot umpires, might be implemented. One is the fully automated version, in which the AI-powered system calls every pitch a ball or a strike and relays the call to the umpire. Or the MLB could decide to use the AI as a review system, like VAR in soccer<\/a> or the Hawk-Eye system used in professional tennis: each side gets a certain number of challenges, which are then adjudicated by the automated system.<\/p>\n Robot umpires have been showing up at minor league baseball games for the last couple of years, and the tech seems to work. (It\u2019s not that different from the strike zone you see superimposed on a TV broadcast.) The existing system was developed by a company called TrackMan, which also builds sophisticated ball-tracking tech for golfers. In practice, it\u2019s quite simple: the umpires slip a dedicated iPhone into their back pocket and an earbud into their ear, and the system signals ball or strike into their headphone after every pitch. Part of the goal has been to make the on-field product look the same, with umps making the calls \u2014 no hulking robot standing behind home plate \u2014 only faster and more accurately.<\/p>\n
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