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Computer Vision

Teaching machines to see, name, and measure.
Editorial illustration representing Computer Vision: Teaching machines to see, name, and measure.

Computer vision turns pixels into structure: a bounding box around a face, a label on a leaf, a depth value on a wall. Once a craft of hand-tuned filters, it is now mostly a downstream consumer of deep learning.

In plain language

In AI and machine learning, you will run into this term whenever someone talks about how a model is built or used. Computer vision turns pixels into structure: a bounding box around a face, a label on a leaf, a depth value on a wall. Once a craft of hand-tuned filters, it is now mostly a downstream consumer of deep learning. If you are new to the field, the simplest mental model is this: teaching machines to see, name, and measure. Read it once with that frame in mind, then come back and read it again — that is usually enough for the rest of the entry to make sense.

Inline editorial illustration evoking Computer Vision: teaching machines to see, name, and measure.
FIG. 1Computer Vision, seen from a second angle — teaching machines to see, name, and measure.

An everyday picture

Think of Computer Vision less like a thinking person and more like someone who has read an enormous amount and now finishes other people's sentences for a living. They have absorbed the shape of the work; they have not memorised any one page.

Where it shows up

Computer Vision tends to sit inside products that need to read, write, or recognise without a hard-coded rule — assistants, search, document tools, voice apps. It is rarely the only moving part, but it is often the part the user feels.

A small example

Imagine the scene above. The role Computer Vision plays is the one its blurb describes — Teaching machines to see, name, and measure. When a chatbot in a customer service portal reads a question and returns a draft reply, several of these AI ideas — model, prompt, context — are at work behind the single button you saw.

Common misunderstanding

MYTH
It is easy to assume Computer Vision 'understands' the way a person does. It does not. It learns patterns, and patterns can be fooled — confident answers are not the same thing as correct ones.

One line to take with you

Computer Vision is statistics worn well. Useful for patterns; double-check it for facts.
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