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This article was published on December 20, 2017

Google’s AI can predict whether humans will like an image or not


Google’s AI can predict whether humans will like an image or not

Google’s AI researchers recently showed off a new method for teaching computers to understand why some images are more aesthetically pleasing than others.

Traditionally, machines sort images using basic categorization – like determining whether an image does or does not contain a cat. The new research demonstrates that AI can now rate image quality, regardless of category.

The process, called neural image assessment (NIMA), uses deep learning to train a convolutional neural network (CNN) to predict ratings for images.

According to a white paper published by the researchers:

Our approach differs from others in that we predict the distribution of human opinion scores using a convolutional neural network … Our resulting network can be used to not only score images reliably and with high correlation to human perception, but also to assist with adaptation and optimization of photo editing/enhancement algorithms in a photographic pipeline.

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Credit: Google

The NIMA model eschews traditional approaches in favor a 10-point rating scale. A machine examines both the specific pixels of an image and its overall aesthetic. It then determines how likely any rating is to be chosen by a human. Basically, the AI tries to guess how much a person would like the picture.

This doesn’t bring us any closer to machines that can feel or think – but it might make computers better artists or curators. The process can, potentially, be used to find the best image in a batch.

If you’re the type of person who snaps 20 or 30 images at a time in order to ensure you’ve got the best one, this could save you a lot of space. Hypothetically, with the tap of a button, AI could go through all of the images in your storage and determine which ones were similar, then delete all but the best.

According to a recent post on the Google research blog, NIMA can also be used to optimize image settings in order to produce the perfect result:

We observed that the baseline aesthetic ratings can be improved by contrast adjustments directed by the NIMA score. Consequently, our model is able to guide a deep CNN filter to find aesthetically near-optimal settings of its parameters, such as brightness, highlights and shadows.

Credit: Google

It might not seem revolutionary to create a neural network that’s almost as good at understanding image quality as humans are, but the applications for a computer with human-like sight are numerous.

In order for AI to perform tasks in the real world, like safely driving a car without human assistance, it has to be capable of “seeing” and understanding its environment. NIMA, and projects like it, are laying the groundwork for the fully-capable machines of the future.

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