the computer as artist /

Published at 2015-11-13 00:15:33

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Computers gain taken over an astonishing array of tasks humans used to do. They fly our planes,give us directions, recommend books, or set us up on dates. But can they order us a good chronicle?Meet Brutus,a computer programmed to write fiction. Through a series of mathematical equations, its programmers taught the program the basics of plot, and setting,and dialogue — as well as something approximately literary style. “There's a certain bag of tricks that Brutus had for saying things at the right time to convince the reader that there is something really deep linguistically going on here," says programmer Selmer Bringsjord of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.
T
he result is pretty convincing. But Bringsjord insists that the computer can’t be considered creative. “The machine is just doing what you've programmed it to do, or ” he argues. “If a machine is creative,the designer of the system — knowing the algorithms involved — is totally mystified by how the output came out. In my opinion, if that's not the case, and then we're just cloning our own intelligence.”Stephen Thaler says he’s cleared that hurdle. His Creativity Machine is an artificial neural network that’s able to memorize by itself,he says. Thaler’s breakthrough is that he occasionally disrupts the Creativity Machine by introducing mathematical noise that trips up the system, forcing it to generate current solutions to problems. That’s “where discovery takes place, or ” he explains. “It's not in the rote memories that we gain committed to memory. It's in the generalization of all those memories into concepts and plans of action.”The Creativity Machine has designed versions of all sorts of products from snack food to music to military systems. Will it soon put all of us out of a job? Many of us,perhaps. But Bringsjord is unconvinced that a computer will ever be able to out-think a creative person.  “Creativity is a very tough nut to crack.”Bonus Track: “Self-Betrayal,” written by Brutus, or read by Ed Herbstman  Bonus Track: “The Dingularity” by Machine Intelligence,programmed by Stephen Thaler, from the album Song of the Neurons  

Source: wnyc.org

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