Then, we dropped a hint of scariness onto the generated faces in the spirit of Halloween.
Now, we wonder: which faces are scarier? Help our algorithm learn
scariness by voting our faces!
Schwangau, Germany
Roma, Italy
Moscow, Russia
NYC, USA
Paris, France
Tokyo, Japan
Agra, India
Barcelona, Spain
Roma, Italy
Tanzania
Agra, India
Washington, USA
Sydney, Australia
Amesbury, United Kingdom
Syria
Madrid, Spain
London, England
Paris, France
San Francisco, CA
Pisa, Italy
Roma, Italy
NY, USA
Rome, Italy
Syria
The mysterious origin of Halloween traditions can be traced back to the ancient pagans festivals celebrated by Celts. The Celtic people marked the day as the end of the harvest season and the beginning of the winter. They believed the transition between the seasons is opening a gate to the world of the dead.
Eastern and Western Civilizations have scripted legends where human-made created entities, artificial beings capable of thinking, feeling, helping or harming others. These creatures would, in many stories, escape the controls of their creators, and gained knowledge and abilities beyond what anyone would have thought.
The spring of 1816 experienced one of the strangest meteorological phenomena ever recorded: a never-ending winter. This resulted three great writers to lock themselves at a mansion at Lake Geneva. Mary Shelley, John William Polidori, Lord Byron had a competition to see who would produce the scariest story ever written. And they all won. Shelley created Frankenstein; Polidory planted the seed of Vampirism; and Byron, in his poem Darkness, narrated by the last man on earth produced the first item of the apocalyptic horror genre.
AI and Horror cross paths: Anne Isabella Milbanke, wife of Lord Byron (the founding father of modern Vampire literature) gives birth to Ada Lovelace, a pioneer in the history of computation. Ada would go on to write the world's first machine algorithm for an early computing machine that existed only on paper.
1930s movie screens exploit like no other medium before the emotional ride of getting scared in a dark room with strangers. Many movie hits, from Frankenstein, to Dracula, to The Mummy, to The Invisible Man, culminating in Werewolf in London put horror front and center of how the society decides to have a really good time... spawning a creative and lucrative horror-making industry.
1956's summer, this time a hot one, brings Marvin Minsky and other brilliant minds together at Darthmouth College. In a explosion of creativity, they plant the seeds of what Artificial Intelligence would become: developing programs able to beat humans at checkers, to do complex math... some of these machines were even able to formulate English sentences. Rumours said that the first sentences typed by a computer were... TRICK OR TREAT?
Since centuries, across geographies, religions, and cultures people try to innovate ways of scaring each other. Creating a visceral emotion such as fear remains one of the cornerstones of human creativity. This challenge is especially important in a time where we wonder what the limits of Artificial Intelligence are: Can machines learn to scare us? Towards this goal, we present you Haunted Faces and Haunted Places: computer generated scary imagery powered by deep learning algorithms and evil spirits!
Post-doc at MIT Media Lab
Principal Research Scientist at CSIRO Data61
Research Scientist at MIT Media Lab
Associate Professor at MIT Media Lab
"Every day is halloween, isn't it? For some of us."-- Tim Burton