Arolsen Archives’ #everynamecounts Project Uses Artificial Intelligence to Help Uncover Information on Victims of Nazi Persecution
Accenture (NYSE: ACN) volunteers have developed an AI-based solution that significantly speeds up the extraction of information on victims of Nazi persecution from Arolsen Archives documents, increasing productivity by 40 times. The project has indexed over 160,000 names and processed 18,000 documents since its launch in December 2021. More than 950 volunteers from Accenture have participated, showcasing a commitment to remembering history while leveraging technology for social good.
- AI solution has increased document indexing productivity by 40 times.
- More than 160,000 names indexed and 18,000 documents processed since December 2021.
- Over 950 volunteers involved, highlighting strong community engagement.
- None.
Project is supported by volunteers and digital technology from Accenture
Accenture’s artificial intelligence solution captures handwritten and printed documents about Nazi persecution victims for Arolsen Archives’ #everynamecounts project. Copyright © Arolsen Archives 2022
The Arolsen Archives preserve the world’s largest collection of documents on Nazi persecution — 110 million documents and digital objects, a portion of which are part of UNESCO’s Memory of the World program — to keep the memory of the crimes of the German terror regime alive. An essential part of the Archives’ work is to make these documents accessible to all who wish to search for traces of Holocaust victims and survivors, persecution of minorities and forced labor.
Every document maintained in the archives needs to be reviewed and its information (e.g., the family name and birth date on a prisoner registration form) put into a database. To facilitate this process, the Arolsen Archives established “#everynamecounts,” a crowdsourcing project for volunteers to extract information from documents manually.
Translating, reading, transcribing, cataloging and validating these documents by hand could take decades. Each document is indexed independently by three volunteers and, if the entries don’t match, reviewed for accuracy by an Arolsen Archives employee. In effect, it can take up to four people to index and validate four documents in one hour.
Working with Accenture’s Solutions.AI team, the volunteers configured an existing Accenture AI solution, which uses optical character recognition and machine learning technology. It indexes documents that are particularly difficult and tedious to extract for humans. These include prisoner and transfer lists with dozens of rows, concentration camp records, and tracing documents, which are inquiries about the locations and fates of family members and loved ones.
Even though the AI does the heavy lifting, human oversight of the process remains important not just to ensure accuracy but also to keep the AI solution learning. By reviewing and correcting information, volunteers “teach” the solution to recognize handwriting characters and abbreviations that were typical for the time. Thanks to their inputs, the AI has gradually improved its precision by
Since Accenture implemented the AI solution in
More than 950 Accenture people have volunteered for the project to date, with Accenture also supporting maintenance and further development of the AI solution.
“We are proud of our people’s efforts to help keep alive the memories of those who endured unimaginable pain and suffering, at a time when antisemitism, racism and ultra-nationalism are rearing their ugly heads again,” said
“We are overwhelmed by how many volunteers support digitizing our archive,” said
Learn more about how Accenture volunteers have helped #everynamecounts.
About Accenture
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About Arolsen Archives
The Arolsen Archives are the international center on Nazi persecution with the world's most comprehensive archive on the victims and survivors of National Socialism. The collection has information on about 17.5 million people and belongs to
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Accenture
+49 175 57 61393
jens.derksen@accenture.com
Dr.
Arolsen Archives
+49 5691 629 182
anke.muenster@arolsen-archives.org
Source: Accenture
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