Sylvia
Flight #5342: I Will Remember You
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In case this hasn't been posted here on FSU yet and people are interested to discuss different aspects of this topic in one thread - here's the link to Dave Skretta's article for the Associated Press (Dec. 1, 2025):
apnews.com
Excerpts:
Harnessing the power of AI to help revolutionize Olympic-level figure skating
A new app designed by a pair of computer scientists aims to revolutionize the way figure skating is judged.
The app is called OOFSkate, and powered by AI technology it analyzes from a tablet or mobile phone a skater’s jump height, rotation speed, airtime and even landing quality. It provides skaters with feedback without having to wear sensors or other technology.
“Our vision for the system is to automate the technical calling of the sport,” said Jerry Lu, who along with his old college roomate, Jacob Blindenbach, have built out the system. “This manifests itself in a combination of using AI-assisted computer vision, but also the knowledge of figure skating, essentially taking out the stuff that should be judged without subjectivity.”
In other words, let humans judge the artistic side of the sport. Let computers handle the technical stuff.
“What are the things that go into a particular jump? We’re trying to measure those things as a semi-automated technical assistant,” Lu told The Associated Press in an interview ahead of this week’s Grand Prix Final, one of the premier events in the sport. “But also, it’s a coaching tool that teachers around the country can use to evaluate their own athletes.”
The system itself seems remarkably simple: It uses a phone or tablet camera to capture a skater in motion, then overlays the key points of a jump or spin — the idealized version of a given element — and records the metrics that technical panels typically use.
Instantly, a coach or judge can know whether a skater completed three full turns of a triple lutz, or landed on the correct blade edge for a salchow. They can know how high the skater jumped, which is one of the judging criteria, and how fast they were spinning.
“If someone under-rotates,” Blindenbach explained, “that should always be called. There shouldn’t be a missed call or a controversy because something doesn’t play out. Sometimes a position makes it hard (for a judge) to see if they’re on an edge or off an edge on a lutz or a flip. We hope that AI can make the sport more fair.” [...]
When it comes to the Olympics, the fact that Omega is its official data provider provides another obstacle in implementation.
So given the slow pace of technological adoption, Lu and Blindenbach are focused for now on fine-tuning the system to help coaches, athletes and commentators better do their jobs, especially as many prepare for the Milan Cortina Olympics in February.
“We don’t want to step on toes,” Blindenbach said. “When you go fully AI and take the human out of the loop, people generally get mad, and the results are poor. We want to assist. If that’s jump height or rotation, or if someone under-rotates by a quarter, these are easy things to do with AI, relatively speaking, compared to trying to capture something artistic. That’s where we see ourselves.”

Please just say "computer analysis".
on those jumps right up until her retirement! She'll be long gone before AI or computer analysis arrives on the scene!
