Currently, artificial Intelligence is trained to be perfect. Creators and developers are feeding it with examples and information not only from the internet but also from real-life examples in order to make AI more accurate and give mistake-free outputs.
Benedikte Wallace is now on a mission to explore the uses of AI in multiple areas like in dancing or painting. In her Ph.D. she explored human dance and taught it to a computer for more than a year.
Wallace said,
About halfway through the degree, I finally had something that looked like human dance. However, then I found that the examples the dancers preferred, were the ones where the AI made mistakes.
In her Ph.D. her research could reveal more about the uses of AI in the field of creative professions. The research is not new. Previously we could use prompts to initiate creative processes like creating an art or image.
But in the future with the case study and the research of Benedikte Wallace, she believed that creative professionals will use AI in a different field for better work.
Today there are still technical obstacles. When it comes to dance, the machine cannot generate this immediately—it requires a lot of data processing. If you are on stage, ten seconds is a very long wait,
she says.
Read More:
Image Source: https://shorturl.at/imsu8
News Source: https://shorturl.at/nIMV3