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That's how I found Seek by iNaturalist, a free app where you take photos of plants, animals and fungi. Artificial intelligence suggests its type -- with human confirmation -- while your input and ...
Wickedly addictive, the iNaturalist app identifies unfamiliar species you find on your travels or in your backyard. And it does a lot more besides.
The iNaturalist App allows people to upload photos of their findings in nature that will then help scientists make new discoveries.
UVic professor Brian Starzomski explains iNaturalist, an international program run out of California with many programs under ...
Take a picture with the iNaturalist app and help scientists with research here in Minnesota and around the globe.
The iNaturalist app allows users to upload unidentified photos from a smartphone (left). Its artificial intelligence software offers a species suggestion for this photo (right). Once the species ...
iNaturalist lets you upload photos of animals or plants and identifies them with computer vision, and some help from its community. And it's great for kids.
How iNaturalist Works Users submit “observations” of an individual organism they have encountered in the wild to the iNaturalist app on their phone or to the organization’s website.
Powered by the app iNaturalist, Life Responds invites eclipse watchers to document how plants and animals react to the unusual midday darkness.
More than 240 million observations worldwide iNaturalist is an app that allows users to take photos of plants, fungi, animals and any piece of nature.
What exactly is iNaturalist? The 17-year-old citizen science project that has been referenced in an Australian murder trial ...
On June 10 the nonprofit organization iNaturalist, which runs a popular online platform for nature observers, announced in a blog post that it had received a $1.5-million grant from Google.org ...