Question

In 2019, Chhavi Yadav and Léon Bottou recovered 50,000 lost examples of these things by recreating the imprecisely documented preprocessing steps used to generate them. In his USENIX (“USE-nix”) Security keynote, James Mickens joked that (-5[1])“three explorers…went into a haunted house” and found these things in an “ancient book of evil”. Researchers at clothing retailer Zalando argued that these things are overused, and released photos of various fashion products as a drop-in replacement. Some of these things sourced from high-school students and Census Bureau employees were collected by Corinna Cortes, (15[1])Christopher Burges, and (*) Yann LeCun into a database sometimes called the “Hello World” (10[1])of deep learning. (10[1])70,000 (10[1])small grayscale images of these things make up the MNIST (“EM-nist”) dataset. For 10 points, (10[1])a simple OCR task involves classifying pictures of what things into their ten possible categories? ■END■

ANSWER: handwritten digits [or numbers; accept answers including MNIST before mention; prompt on “characters”; prompt on “images” or “pictures” or synonyms with “of what?”; reject “letters”] (All of the clues before the last sentence are specifically about the digits in the MNIST dataset.)
<BC>
= Average correct buzz position
Conv. %Power %Average Buzz
100%20%103.40

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Buzzes

PlayerTeamOpponentBuzz PositionValue
Geoffrey WuI thought this was a Counter-Strike themed tournamentJAX guide -league -of -legends -lol -mortal -kombat33-5
Anh Khoa TranfooA TV Guide for Netheads8815
Michał GerasimiukWhy does ACF have electrons do its work?Eventually Munches All Computer Storage10110
Liam KusalikI Paused My Unique Game to Be HereThe10410
Yoona ChoiCarnegie LemonsComputer Science: Going Outside10510
Kenny ZhangJAX guide -league -of -legends -lol -mortal -kombatI thought this was a Counter-Strike themed tournament11910