首页|Researchers from Stanford University Discuss Findings in Machine Learning (From Sublime Awe To Abject Cringe:On the Embodied Processing of Ai Art)

Researchers from Stanford University Discuss Findings in Machine Learning (From Sublime Awe To Abject Cringe:On the Embodied Processing of Ai Art)

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By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at Robotics & Machine Learning Daily News Daily News-Current study results on Machine Learn ing have been published.According to news reporting out of Stanford,California,by NewsRx editors,the research stated,"This article urges a reorientation in thinking about AI art (and AI more generally),shifting from the common focus o n computational ‘intelligence' to the embodied,metabolic processing that takes place in our encounters with (moving-image) artworks produced with machine-learn ing algorithms.Drawing on Merleau-Ponty's corporeal phenomenology,the article argues that spectators' bodies act as filters,distilling visual phenomena from a range of extraperceptual facets of these works; in particular,bodies react to invisible algorithmic infrastructures,which,in the case of machine learning a lgorithms,also operate as filters in their own right." Our news journalists obtained a quote from the research from Stanford University,"The collision of metabolic and computational microtemporal operations calls f orth a number of embodied affects,ranging from sublime awe to disorientation,c ringe,and uncanny feelings of relational and environmental entanglement.These themes are explored through the work of four contemporary artists working with A I:Ian Cheng,Refik Anadol,Jon Rafman,and Yvette Granata."

StanfordCaliforniaUnited StatesNor th and Central AmericaCyborgsEmerging TechnologiesMachine LearningStanfo rd University

2024

Robotics & Machine Learning Daily News

Robotics & Machine Learning Daily News

ISSN:
年,卷(期):2024.(Mar.12)