If you are like most genealogists, you probably have cherished old family photos whose details, such as when they were taken, remain a mystery. Perhaps you flipped them over hoping to find more details, only to discover that your ancestors who treasured these photos didn’t leave any information behind. Until now, missing details about your photos could have remained a mystery forever, but here at MyHeritage, we set out to find a solution. Today we’re excited to announce the release of PhotoDater
PhotoDater
Check out the cool video below to see what PhotoDater
PhotoDater
How it started
Our Founder and CEO, Gilad Japhet, came up with the idea for PhotoDater
How it works
PhotoDater
The historical photos used to train the model came from open-source repositories such as the Library of Congress. Photos uploaded by MyHeritage users and stored on the company’s servers were not used to train the AI model.
The algorithm provides date estimates for undated photos taken between 1860 and 1990, for which it is reasonably confident it can return results with high accuracy. Estimates are calculated only for photos that do not already have a date in the metadata, that include people, and that are actual photographs, not documents or gravestones. A photo of just a car or a scan of a historical record won’t receive a date estimate. Date estimates can be reviewed and saved by you to the photo’s metadata, or dismissed. If you prefer not to see any date estimates, you can turn off PhotoDater
Extensive testing of the algorithm’s accuracy, conducted using definitively dated photos that were not used in the original training set, revealed the estimates to be extremely accurate, not just on a decade level, but often closer to an actual year. Analysis of the testing set, displayed in the graph below, shows that for approximately 60% of the photos, PhotoDater
Histogram showing the accuracy of PhotoDater
Using photo date estimates in family history research
Date estimates are valuable clues that can further your family history research. By figuring out when a mystery photo was taken, it becomes easier to identify who appears in it, and deduce what event it was taken at, such as a wedding or other milestone. For example, if the date estimate suggests that Grandma and Grandpa were married in 1931, based on their wedding photo, and you remember Grandma saying she got married when she was 23, or you can gauge her age from her appearance in the photo, you can narrow down her birth year to circa 1908. Nevertheless, it’s important to remember that date estimates are just that: estimates. While PhotoDater
Accessing PhotoDater
To use PhotoDater
The My Photos page will be displayed. Click the “Upload” button in the top right corner to upload more photos.
Click any photo’s thumbnail to view the Photo Page.
Photo Page: Date estimates will automatically appear for undated photos, as marked in red (click to zoom)
Whenever you view the Photo Page, if the photo is undated, PhotoDater
You can click the estimate to open a pop-up window where you can save the estimate (marked in red below), or reject it. To learn more about the estimate, click “More details,” marked below in green.
Clicking “More details” opens a histogram that explains more about the date estimate for the photo, and shows the confidence level of the estimate, as well as an average error range. In the example below, the histogram indicates a 90% confidence level that the photo was taken in 1953, with an average error range of 5 years, which means it was likely taken between 1948–1958. According to the histogram, there’s also a small possibility the photo was taken in the 1940s. The 1953 estimate is quite close — the particular wedding photo shown in this example was actually taken in 1951.
More details: Histogram of decades and the confidence level of PhotoDater’s estimate (click to zoom)
The histogram is very helpful because it gives you more information about the estimate. In the example above, it shows that if not from the 1950s, the photo was probably taken in the 1940s.
In the example below, PhotoDater
PhotoDater
The histogram for this photo is even more telling, and shows a 95% confidence level that the photo was taken in the 1970s, with an error range of just 4 years, but leaning towards the 1960s and not the 1980s.
Filtering your photos to see only undated ones
If you have already added dates to your photos (like any good genealogist should!) then you might want to filter your photos to show only the undated ones, and then see what PhotoDater
Once in List View, click the “Year range” filter on the top left of the list, marked in the screenshot above.
Select “Missing date,” and then click “Apply.”
Click any photo in the filtered list to open it and PhotoDater
Date estimates in List View
After saving a date estimate, it will appear in the photo’s metadata in List View, in addition to the Photo Page. When filtering photos by year range, the results will also include photos whose saved date estimate falls within that decade.
In the near future, we plan to also add PhotoDater
Privacy
Photos that are uploaded to MyHeritage by users were not used to train the AI model. When PhotoDater
Many users will no doubt enjoy gaining new insights through this feature, while others may prefer to avoid estimates and only rely on hard facts. If you prefer not to receive date estimates for your photos, you can disable PhotoDater
Availability
PhotoDater
Try PhotoDater today!
Historical photos provide us with a tangible connection to our ancestors, and enrich our family history. With the addition of PhotoDater
Since 2020, MyHeritage is the undisputed industry leader in developing innovative features for family photos, and as always, there’s much more to come. We invite you to upload your photos to MyHeritage and take advantage of PhotoDater
The post Introducing PhotoDater™, an Exclusive, Free New Feature to Estimate When Old Photos Were Taken appeared first on MyHeritage Blog.
Source: My Heritage