>Giving AI systems the ability to focus on particular brain regions can make them much better at reconstructing images of what a monkey is looking at from brain recordings
>Artificial intelligence systems can now create remarkably accurate reconstructions of what someone is looking at based on recordings of their brain activity. These reconstructed images are greatly improved when the AI learns which parts of the brain to pay attention to.
>“As far as I know, these are the closest, most accurate reconstructions,” says Umut Güçlü at Radboud University in the Netherlands.
>Güçlü’s team is one of several around the world using AI systems to work out what animals or people are seeing from brain recordings and scans. In one previous study, his team used a functional MRI (fMRI) scanner to record the brain activity of three people as they were shown a series of photographs.
>In another study, the team used implanted electrode arrays to directly record the brain activity of a single macaque monkey as it looked at AI-generated images. This implant was done for other purposes by another team, says Güçlü’s colleague Thirza Dado, also at Radboud University. “The macaque was not implanted so that we can do reconstruction of perception,” she says. “That is not a good argument to do surgery on animals.”
SlaversBae on
This is mind blowing. Could this have the potential to replace a polygraph I wonder.
gortlank on
What’s the non-fucked non-dystopian use case for this exactly?
Hell, as-is you have to be actively looking at the thing, so what’s the use-case period?
Confident-Alarm-6911 on
This fuckery should be banned from further development
OneOnOne6211 on
I was wondering how long it would take for this to happen.
I studied psychology and when I was in college I remember seeing something like this but without modern day AI (cuz that didn’t exist yet). They were able to recreate some extremely vague and poor images people were seeing.
I imagined that AI could significantly improve this as soon as I first heard of AI like Sora. I guess they finally are.
5 Comments
Submission statement:
>Giving AI systems the ability to focus on particular brain regions can make them much better at reconstructing images of what a monkey is looking at from brain recordings
>Artificial intelligence systems can now create remarkably accurate reconstructions of what someone is looking at based on recordings of their brain activity. These reconstructed images are greatly improved when the AI learns which parts of the brain to pay attention to.
>“As far as I know, these are the closest, most accurate reconstructions,” says Umut Güçlü at Radboud University in the Netherlands.
>Güçlü’s team is one of several around the world using AI systems to work out what animals or people are seeing from brain recordings and scans. In one previous study, his team used a functional MRI (fMRI) scanner to record the brain activity of three people as they were shown a series of photographs.
>In another study, the team used implanted electrode arrays to directly record the brain activity of a single macaque monkey as it looked at AI-generated images. This implant was done for other purposes by another team, says Güçlü’s colleague Thirza Dado, also at Radboud University. “The macaque was not implanted so that we can do reconstruction of perception,” she says. “That is not a good argument to do surgery on animals.”
This is mind blowing. Could this have the potential to replace a polygraph I wonder.
What’s the non-fucked non-dystopian use case for this exactly?
Hell, as-is you have to be actively looking at the thing, so what’s the use-case period?
This fuckery should be banned from further development
I was wondering how long it would take for this to happen.
I studied psychology and when I was in college I remember seeing something like this but without modern day AI (cuz that didn’t exist yet). They were able to recreate some extremely vague and poor images people were seeing.
I imagined that AI could significantly improve this as soon as I first heard of AI like Sora. I guess they finally are.