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PlateMate: Crowdsourcing Nutrition Analysis from Food Photographs

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2011

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Association for Computing Machinery
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Noronha, Jon, Eric Hysen, Haoqi Zhang, and Krzysztof Z. Gajos. 2011. PlateMate: Crowdsourcing nutrition analysis from food photographs. In UIST '11 Proceedings of the 24th Annual ACM Symposium on User Interface Software and Technology: October 16-19, 2011, Santa Barbara, CA, 1-12. New York, NY: Association for Computing Machinery.

Abstract

We introduce PlateMate, a system that allows users to take photos of their meals and receive estimates of food intake and composition. Accurate awareness of this information can help people monitor their progress towards dieting goals, but current methods for food logging via self-reporting, expert observation, or algorithmic analysis are time-consuming, expensive, or inaccurate. PlateMate crowdsources nutritional analysis from photographs using Amazon Mechanical Turk, automatically coordinating untrained workers to estimate a meal's calories, fat, carbohydrates, and protein. We present the Management framework for crowdsourcing complex tasks, which supports PlateMate's nutrition analysis workflow. Results of our evaluations show that PlateMate is nearly as accurate as a trained dietitian and easier to use for most users than traditional self-reporting.

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human computation, crowdsourcing, mechanical turk, nutrition, remote food photography

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