NELL: Never-Ending Language Learning

Read the Web
Browse the Knowledge Base!

Can computers learn to read? We think so. "Read the Web" is a research project that attempts to create a computer system that learns over time to read the web. Since January 2010, our computer system called NELL (Never-Ending Language Learner) has been running continuously, attempting to perform two tasks each day:

So far, NELL has accumulated over 50 million candidate beliefs by reading the web, and it is considering these at different levels of confidence. NELL has high confidence in 2,810,379 of these beliefs — these are displayed on this website. It is not perfect, but NELL is learning. You can track NELL's progress below or @cmunell on Twitter, browse and download its knowledge base, read more about our technical approach, or join the discussion group.

Recently-Learned Facts Follow NELL on Twitter

instance iteration date learned confidence
beautiful_table is a kind of furniture 1111 06-jul-2018 99.5  
louis_jean_marie_daubenton is a scientist 1111 06-jul-2018 99.9  
islamic_human_rights_commission is a terrorist organization 1111 06-jul-2018 99.8  
simple_wall_clock is an item found on a wall 1111 06-jul-2018 99.6  
aid_medicines is a machine-learning conference 1111 06-jul-2018 94.7  
barack_obama represents the region harvard_law_review 1114 25-aug-2018 100.0  
blaine_boyer plays the sport baseball 1116 12-sep-2018 99.6  
bob_herbert is a journalist that writes for the publication new_york_times 1112 24-jul-2018 100.0  
google_inc has official website __google 1116 12-sep-2018 100.0  
suburban_light_rail is a transportation system located in the city paris 1116 12-sep-2018 100.0