Saturday, March 25, 2023
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Cookie Policy
  • Advertise
Digital Finance Security
  • Home
  • Security Alerts
    • Money Laundering with crypto
    • Minting and Supply
    • Crypto scams
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Programming
  • Regulation and CBDCs
  • Latest
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Security Alerts
    • Money Laundering with crypto
    • Minting and Supply
    • Crypto scams
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Programming
  • Regulation and CBDCs
  • Latest
No Result
View All Result
Digital Finance Security
Home Artificial Intelligence

AI-Powered FRIDA robot collaborates with humans to create art

Greg Miller by Greg Miller
February 7, 2023
in Artificial Intelligence, Latest
A A
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on LinkedinEmailWhatsappTelegram

Carnegie Mellon University’s Robotics Institute has a new artist-in-residence.

FRIDA, a robotic arm with a paintbrush taped to it, uses artificial intelligence to collaborate with humans on works of art. Ask FRIDA to paint a picture, and it gets to work putting brush to canvas.

“There’s this one painting of a frog ballerina that I think turned out really nicely,” said Peter Schaldenbrand, a School of Computer Science Ph.D. student in the Robotics Institute working with FRIDA and exploring AI and creativity. “It is really silly and fun, and I think the surprise of what FRIDA generated based on my input was really fun to see.”

FRIDA, named after Frida Kahlo, stands for Framework and Robotics Initiative for Developing Arts. The project is led by Schaldenbrand with RI faculty members Jean Oh and Jim McCann, and has attracted students and researchers across CMU.

Users can direct FRIDA by inputting a text description, submitting other works of art to inspire its style, or uploading a photograph and asking it to paint a representation of it. The team is experimenting with other inputs as well, including audio. They played ABBA’s “Dancing Queen” and asked FRIDA to paint it.

“FRIDA is a robotic painting system, but FRIDA is not an artist,” Schaldenbrand said. “FRIDA is not generating the ideas to communicate. FRIDA is a system that an artist could collaborate with. The artist can specify high-level goals for FRIDA and then FRIDA can execute them.”

The robot uses AI models similar to those powering tools like OpenAI’s ChatGPT and DALL-E 2, which generate text or an image, respectively, in response to a prompt. FRIDA simulates how it would paint an image with brush strokes and uses machine learning to evaluate its progress as it works.

FRIDA’s final products are impressionistic and whimsical. The brushstrokes are bold. They lack the precision sought so often in robotic endeavors. If FRIDA makes a mistake, it riffs on it, incorporating the errant splotch of paint into the end result.

“FRIDA is a project exploring the intersection of human and robotic creativity,” McCann said. “FRIDA is using the kind of AI models that have been developed to do things like caption images and understand scene content and applying it to this artistic generative problem.”

FRIDA taps into AI and machine learning several times during its artistic process. First, it spends an hour or more learning how to use its paintbrush. Then, it uses large vision-language models trained on massive datasets that pair text and images scraped from the internet, such as OpenAI’s Contrastive Language-Image Pre-Training (CLIP), to understand the input. AI systems use these models to generate new text or images based on a prompt.

Other image-generating tools such as OpenAI’s DALL-E 2, use large vision-language models to produce digital images. FRIDA takes that a step further and uses its embodied robotic system to produce physical paintings. One of the biggest technical challenges in producing a physical image is reducing the simulation-to-real gap, the difference between what FRIDA composes in simulation and what it paints on the canvas. FRIDA uses an idea known as real2sim2real. The robot’s actual brush strokes are used to train the simulator to reflect and mimic the physical capabilities of the robot and painting materials.

FRIDA’s team also seeks to address some of the limitations in current large vision-language models by continually refining the ones they use. The team fed the models the headlines from news articles to give it a sense of what was happening in the world and further trained them on images and text more representative of diverse cultures to avoid an American or Western bias. This multicultural collaboration effort is led by Zhixuan Liu and Beverley-Claire Okogwu, first-year RI master’s students, and Youeun Shin and Youngsik Yun, visiting master’s students from Dongguk University in Korea. Their efforts include training data contributions from China, Japan, Korea, Mexico, Nigeria, Norway, Vietnam and other countries.

Once FRIDA’s human user has specified a high-level concept of the painting they want to create, the robot uses machine learning to create its simulation and develop a plan to make a painting to achieve the user’s goals. FRIDA displays a color pallet on a computer screen for a human to mix and provide to the robot. Automatic paint mixing is currently being developed, led by Jiaying Wei, a master’s student in the School of Architecture, with Eunsu Kang, faculty in the Machine Learning Department.

Armed with a brush and paint, FRIDA will make its first strokes. Every so often, the robot uses an overhead camera to capture an image of the painting. The image helps FRIDA evaluate its progress and refine its plan, if needed. The whole process takes hours.

“People wonder if FRIDA is going to take artists’ jobs, but the main goal of the FRIDA project is quite the opposite. We want to really promote human creativity through FRIDA,” Oh said. “For instance, I personally wanted to be an artist. Now, I can actually collaborate with FRIDA to express my ideas in painting.”

More information about FRIDA is available on its website. The team will present its latest research from the project, “FRIDA: A Collaborative Robot Painter With a Differentiable, Real2Sim2Real Planning Environment” at the 2023 IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation this May in London. FRIDA resides in the RI’s Bot Intelligence Group (BIG) lab in the Squirrel Hill neighborhood of Pittsburgh.

Previous Post

Comprehensive Intelligent Programming of Electronic Networks

Next Post

AI can predict the effectiveness of breast cancer chemotherapy

Related Posts

#image_title
Latest

Digital Russian Ruble imminent

March 20, 2023
#image_title
Artificial Intelligence

How AI could upend the world even more than electricity or the internet

March 20, 2023
#image_title
Artificial Intelligence

A new method to boost the speed of online databases

March 14, 2023
#image_title
Artificial Intelligence

A new and better way to create word lists

March 14, 2023
Load More
Next Post

AI can predict the effectiveness of breast cancer chemotherapy

New AI technology could change game prep for Super Bowl teams

POPULAR

  • #image_title

    Laundering on Ethereum mainnet

    6 shares
    Share 2 Tweet 2
  • Flashloan Attack Alert – ETH mainnet

    2 shares
    Share 1 Tweet 1
  • Speculation mounts that U.S. banking crisis was a ploy to push CBDCs

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • 1,000,000,000 USDT minted on Tron network

    3 shares
    Share 1 Tweet 1
  • USDT Minting Activity

    9 shares
    Share 4 Tweet 2

digitalfinsec.com




201 N. Union St,

Suite 110,

Alexandria, VA 22314, USA





info

  • Advertise
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy

partners

Trade stocks today

Trade crypto 20% off today

Trade fractional shares today

Get your hardware wallet today

Analyze stocks like a pro

Recent Alerts

Flashloan Attack Alert – ETH mainnet

Laundering on Ethereum mainnet

Flashloan Attack Alert – ETH mainnet

Flashloan Attack Alert – ETH mainnet

Flashloan Attack Alert – ETH mainnet

Flashloan Attack Alert – ETH mainnet

© 2023 DigitalFinSec.com by Digital Finance Security, LLC - All rights reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Security Alerts
    • Money Laundering with crypto
    • Minting and Supply
    • Crypto scams
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Programming
  • Regulation and CBDCs
  • Latest

--

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy Policy here and our Cookie Policy here.
Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?