缅北强奸

'Disruptive innovation': Student-run Black hackathon tackles algorithm bias, community-building

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(photo by Jamie Grill/Getty Images)

More than 200 participants from across Canada and the United States recently joined NSBEHacks, a 24-hour virtual hackathon that aimed to redesign digital technologies so they offer better service to marginalized communities. 

Now in its fourth year, the 2022 event was organized by the University of Toronto chapter of the National Society of Black Engineers (NSBE 缅北强奸). NSBEHacks is the鈥痜irst Black student-run hackathon within the Greater Toronto Area. 

鈥淭his year鈥檚 theme was 鈥楧isruptive Innovation,鈥 and by the end of the weekend, we received an influx of solutions that we could have never envisioned,鈥 says Chetachi Ugwu-Ojobe, a third-year student in the Faculty of Applied Science & Engineering and president of NSBE 缅北强奸. 

One problem that NSBEHacks teams tackled is algorithm bias, where errors or assumptions in a system鈥檚 machine learning process can lead to prejudices and create unfair outcomes. 

D鈥橲peakerVerse, the team that won first place in the hackathon鈥檚 缅北强奸 Engineering Challenge, noticed that many voice assistant services alienate individuals by misunderstanding their accents. In response, they created an interactive platform where users can take part in voice games and tongue twisters to test the voice-to-text AI, with the goal of improving accent recognition for voice AI services through collected data.  

鈥淭his team was able to create a disruptive innovation by building on something that already exists in the market and opening it up to people who are neglected by these services 鈥 people with non-Western accents who are often misunderstood and left frustrated by popular voice services,鈥 says Genevieve Aguigwo, a second-year student and vice-president of NSBE 缅北强奸.  

The 2022 NSBEHacks event was organized by the 缅北强奸 chapter of the National Society of Black Engineers.

The event also sought to cater to the specific needs of Black audiences in fast-paced digital environments such as virtual reality.   

The Barbershop team, which won second place in the event鈥檚 Google Cloud Challenge, used virtual reality to create a welcoming online space that replicates the sense of community found in many Black-owned barbershops.  

鈥淏arbershops hold a historical significance to many Black communities. It鈥檚 not just a place to get a haircut, it can also serve a therapeutic role,鈥 says Ugwu-Ojobe.   

鈥淭he Barbershop team created a virtual space that allows people who are unable to visit a barbershop, because of the pandemic or personal challenges, to gather, share information and stay connected with their community.鈥  

NSBE 缅北强奸 is committed to supporting participants beyond the hackathon as they take their designs to the next level.  

鈥淲e are partnering with the  to give our design teams a platform to bring their ideas to life and make a business out of it,鈥 says Ugwu-Ojobe.  

鈥淗aving a network of people in the industry who they can turn to with questions and reach out to in the future really ties in with NSBE鈥檚 own goals to support the professional development of our community,鈥 adds Aguigwo.  

鈥淎t the end of the day, we鈥檙e trying to increase the representation of Black individuals in engineering and industry.鈥 

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