…care to contribute a link to their favorite site for an AI activity? I’d be really interested in seeing what’s out there, but the field is moving and growing so fast and search engines suck so hard that I know I’m missing out.
Cure my FOMO please!
…care to contribute a link to their favorite site for an AI activity? I’d be really interested in seeing what’s out there, but the field is moving and growing so fast and search engines suck so hard that I know I’m missing out.
Cure my FOMO please!
Except I’m a sentient being; these so-called “AI” programs aren’t actually sentient. They have no self-awareness. It’s just a stream of IF/THEN statements with no actual awareness of said art.
I feel that’s the difference. I have nothing against non-human art as a principle. When these “A.I.” programs actually gain self-awareness and then create art, then I will gladly consider it genuine art.
I really don’t care if it’s “genuine” art or not. If it looks cool, it looks cool.
I can respect that. Lol.
Just like your brain neurons.
You’re comparing different things. That’s not a valid, good-faith comparison.
Conscience arises from a complex system. Just like generative data does - to a different degree.
Except I’m self-aware. I have my own identity. These AI programs aren’t true AI. They aren’t self-aware; they don’t have a distinct identity. One could argue that’s really the only thing that separates an artist from a box with gears in it.
You missed my point. I wasn’t saying AI is self-aware.
There is not a single if/else in a neural network. You are confusing it with decision trees that are used for classification
Could you please explain? I don’t think I understand.
Isn’t every neural network, even the one(s) in our brain, just complicated “If A, then B” statements. Even just
“Given Image 1, Image 2, and Image 3, generate Image 4 by mixing them together according to Criteria 1 and 2”
would be equivalent to saying
IF((Image1, Image2, Image3) AND (Criterion1, Criterion2)),
THEN(Image4)
, would it not? :/
Edit: A word.
I would like to add that if it were the case, that generative image “AIs” were if/else statement, they could not run on graphics cards, that are optimized for the same raw matrix calculations repeated on a lot of variables. If it was just if/else statement, they wouldn’t need to do all the vector calculations stuff.
No, what you describe is a basic decision tree. Let’s say the simplest possible ML algorithm, but it is not used as is in practice anywhere. Usually you find “forests” of more complex trees, and they cannot be used for generation, but are very powerful for labeling or regression (eli5 predict some number).
Generative models are based on multiple transformations of images or sentences in extremely complex, nested chains of vector functions, that can extract relevant information (such as concepts, conceptual similarities, and so on).
In practice (eli5), input is transformed in a vector and passed to a complex chain of vector multiplications and simple mathematical transformations until you get an output that in the vast majority of cases is original, i.e. not present in the training data. Non original outputs are possible in case of few “issues” in the training dataset or training process (unless explicitly asked).
In our brain there are no if/else, but electrical signals modulated and transformed, which is conceptually more similar to the generative models than to a decision tree.
In practice however our brain works very differently than generative models
I’m gonna be honest: I’m still rather confused. While I do now understand that perhaps our brains work differently than typical neural networks (or at least generative neural networks?), I do not yet comprehend how. But your explanation is a starting point. Thanks for that.
In the easiest example of a neuron in a artificial neural network, you take an image, you multiply every pixel by some weight, and you apply a very simple non linear transformation at the end. Any transformation is fine, but usually they are pretty trivial. Then you mix and match these neurons to create a neural network. The more complex the task, the more additional operations are added.
In our brain, a neuron binds some neurotransmitters that trigger a electrical signal, this electrical signal is modulated and finally triggers the release of a certain quantity of certain neurotransmitters on the other extreme of the neuron. Detailed, quantitative mechanisms are still not known. These neurons are put together in an extremely complex neural network, details of which are still unknown.
Artificial neural network started as an extremely coarse simulation of real neural networks. Just toy models to explain the concept. Since then, they diverged, evolving in a direction completely unrelated to real neural network, becoming their own thing.
That is…rather fascinating. Do you know of any reputable articles that can teach me more?
Generative art allows more people to communicate with others in ways they couldn’t before, and to inspire and be inspired by others. The stuff people post online still requires creativity, curiosity, experimentation, and refinement. It also requires learning how to use new skills they may not have had to effectively use new tools that are rapidly evolving and improving to express themselves. Generative art is not a passive process, but an active one, where human artists get a chance to create something unique and meaningful.
Think of it like a camera that that can navigate the multidimensional latent space filled with concepts that can give rise to novel digital art. In the real world you can up, down, left, right, in or out, but in a latent space not only can you go those places, you can go to where Muppets meets impasto. Like a camera, sometimes none of the things you capture are made by you, but you still choose how it’s captured and presented.
You have a lot in common with Charles Baudelaire, even though you’re a hundred years apart from eachother.
I believe that generative art, warts and all, is a vital new form of art that is shaking things up, challenging preconceptions, and getting people angry - just like art should. Generative art introduces new ways to fail that no one is ready for, so if you see someone post some malformed monstrosity somewhere, cut them some slack, they’re just learning. Remember there’s another person on the other end of the internet that was excited to share with you.
When I received my diagnosis of bipolar disorder, I tried a few prompts about it in Midjourney. They helped me process it (and my dad too, I showed him the results).
EDIT: If you’re curious…
I hope you’re doing well. It’s cool you were able to better communicate that way.
Thank you. It…is not an easy road to walk.
If you’re curious, some of the results.
These are definitely a mood. What was the idea behind the ones with people in cars, if you don’t mind me asking?
I was trying out a few different styles/artists. The ones you indicated were in the retrofuturistic style of (the late) Syd Mead.
(The one concession I make is that, out of respect to the living, I only call deceased artists if I’m looking for a particular style.)
Your comment definitely made me think, and I appreciate that, but at the risk of displaying ignorance, but in hopes of learning, I have to ask: doesn’t creating A.I. art just involved pressing “start” (effectively) on the human’s part?
If so, then the only one actually “doing art” would be the A.I., and since the A.I. is not self-aware, it’s not actually an artist, just software gears-in-a-box pumping out a thing.
I fully recognize what all I just said may be misconceptions, but that’s why I intentionally said it. If it’s wrong, I can learn; if it’s right, you can learn. No insult intended here.
As I mentioned in relation to the parent to this comment, when I received my diagnosis of bipolar disorder, I tried a few prompts about it in Midjourney. They helped me process it (and my dad too, I showed him the results).
It’s kind of a spectrum depending on what tool you’re using and your level of commitment. I know with web based interfaces wit can be slow and cumbersome to iterate, but with open source models based on Stable Diffusion you get a lot of freedom. That’s mostly what I base my knowledge off.
Here are some videos of what I mean:
https://youtu.be/-JQDtzSaAuA?t=97
https://youtu.be/1d_jns4W1cM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HtbEuERXSqk
Here is an alternative Piped link(s):
https://piped.video/-JQDtzSaAuA?t=97
https://piped.video/1d_jns4W1cM
Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.
I’m open-source; check me out at GitHub.
I’ll gladly consider it proper art if the human actually uses genuine creativity in creating it. I’m not some troglodyte. So I appreciate you giving me information!
I’ll check out those videos. Thanks. :)
It’s kinda like selfies and cameras. Not all photos taken with cameras are art, but you can make art with cameras.