Identification the name of the game as CNA future-proofs news

Jun 14, 2023 at 02:59 am by admin


Singapore’s Mediacorp is using AI to win a bigger audience for its TV news shows.

In an INMA Ideas Blog, CNA Digital deputy chief editor Chung Lyn-Yi tells how the publisher is using artificial intelligence to optimise the process of posting bulletin content online.

“Imagine you’re a TV news journalist; you and your camera crew have done live hits all day and file a comprehensive video report, wrapping up all the elements of the story for a prime-time news bulletin,” she says.

“Then you wait for it to be published on the website, where it will probably find a different, oftentimes bigger audience. But you’re left waiting for it to be processed by someone else who manages the videos on the website, someone not as close to the story who needs to clip the videos out manually and key in metadata to make them discoverable.”

Chung says Mediacorp has started using AI to speed up this process, with an eye to getting more news video reports and interviews online in a more timely fashion.

Their “smarter approach” has been a project called AI SmartCut, which allows an algorithm to be trained to recognise packaged video reports and interviews with analysts or studio guests in a bulletin. These videos are then clipped out automatically from a 24/7 livestream of the CNA channel.

“We use voice recognition, scene detection, and natural language processing to identify news video stories and interviews and feed them into our content management system for easy publication within minutes of airing.”

The AI has been fed hundreds of hours of speech by news anchors and journalists so that it can recognise audio patterns such as programme music. It also has automatic transcription and keyword tagging, so the videos come with full metadata when pumped into the CMS.

Chung says the initiative – now in final testing – has shown promising results. “We started out with 30-40 per cent accuracy nearly a year ago, but now we’re close to 80 per cent, with aggressive data validation from our journalists and refinement by AI engineers.”

When AI SmartCut is rolled out fully, it is expected it will dramatically increase the number of news video reports online, not just for CNA’s website but for its YouTube channel as well. “People who visit our website will be able to see all the insightful field reports and expert interviews they might have missed.

“AI SmartCut will give us more video inventory for online ad impressions and offer readers a well-rounded news experience, as not everyone wants to read lengthy articles back-to-back.

“By training AI to handle the manpower-intensive, mundane task of clipping out news video reports, we aim to free up our journalists to do more work that adds value.

“We hope to do away with the tedious work of scrubbing through a bulletin recording, matching video reports against a TV rundown, clipping out a video for export and then typing in key search terms for search engine optimisation for each video.

“More importantly, we think this initiative could have wider lessons for the industry, as it will help make TV news less ephemeral. Appointment viewing has been dying for a long time.

“It’s time we made TV news coverage future-proof by making it more modular and primed for an online audience,” she says. “The possibilities are endless for broadcast coverage to be narrowcast and more personalised online.

“Ultimately, we aim to give all the good work in TV news a longer shelf life and the attention it deserves across all platforms.”

Sections: AI & digital technology