• Welcome to Photrio!
    Registration is fast and free. Join today to unlock search, see fewer ads, and access all forum features.
    Click here to sign up

Using AI during Scanning and Subsequent Editing

Recent Classifieds

Forum statistics

Threads
203,403
Messages
2,854,161
Members
101,819
Latest member
Mark J Tudyk
Recent bookmarks
0
Actually hallucination is not limited to AI, human do it all the time as well. Our perception and imagination are basically using the same brain structure (or computing units). That enables us to add in the missing features, fast predict the changes, as well as daydream. It is not exactly a bug, but a feature as well. 😀
 
Well, that's just the term that has come into common use for now when an AI makes a prediction that is contrary to reality, but it's just a fanciful and evocative term to describe a common problem with the software. It's not really hallucinating in the way that a human would hallucinate due to a mental illness or while under the influence of a drug.

The ai is not capable of thought, it doesn't dream or see. It's just an algorithm that analyzes what usually comes next in a set of data that you feed it and uses that information to make a prediction of what you might want it to show you next based on the prompt that you give it.
 
No, it's just a hallucination. It's not a real person's face, but an amalgamation of faces from many many images upon which the software was trained.

Actually that's true for all the faces in the photo, none of the faces are the actual faces of the people originally in the scene.


Generative AI is not capable of making the kinds of decisions you're attributing to it. It doesn't have the capability to know who a person is, or what they look like. It's just predicting what it thinks you want the individual pixel values to be based on the pixel values it was trained on and the prompting you give it.

In his post, Les said: "I have other clearly focused images of these contestants and the guesses were reasonably close.'
 
And yet that's all it's capable of doing, guessing. It just happened to be "reasonably close."
 
It is reasonably likely that contestants at a beauty pageant would have employed cosmetics and chosen hair styles that tend toward a certain set of expected, idealized looks. They may have also self-selected based on those sorts of idealized looks.
So AI may very well have a fair bit of reliable data to help reconstruct how those contestants were attempting to appear.
 
In his post, Les said: "I have other clearly focused images of these contestants and the guesses were reasonably close.'

And like I said, that may be the qualification attributed to the result by someone who doesn't know these women. If you'd show the reconstructed photo to a brother, parent etc. they'd go "Hahaha no you silly, that ain't our Rhonda!"
 
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links.
To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here.

PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY:



Ilford ADOX Freestyle Photographic Stearman Press Weldon Color Lab Blue Moon Camera & Machine
Top Bottom