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by stuckinhell 1202 days ago
Remixing objects and designs consistently like "van gogh" or "super mario" really implies some kind of internal model or "understanding" of the world.

Image generation didn't catch on because of lack of accuracy, but because of how GOOD the results are. It's made artwork immediately accessible to the masses without the huge learning curve. That's where these AI's are going to shine very very quickly.

1 comments

Oh yes - you show them X and they make a model of X.

Show them enough pictures labelled "Van Gogh" and they get an idea of what "Van Gogh" looks like. They dp am awesome job of that.

The problem with the text ones is that people think that showing them words mean that they make a model of the thing the words are describing, rather than of how those words go together.

> The problem with the text ones is that people think that showing them words mean that they make a model of the thing the words are describing, rather than of how those words go together.

I believe a colossal truth is that the most efficient way to learn how the words go together is to at least make some approximate model of what the words are describing. And our optimization algorithms and model architectures are good enough to find theae solutions.

I guess you are on a different level of abstraction that I am.

It's clear the art AI's have a model of "van gogh's" style, and apply it to create very unique forms of art. The neural model weight's aren't storing compressed images of van gogh, but relationships and mathematical models about a concept.