Artificial imagination

Artificial imagination (AIm), also called Synthetic imagination or machine imagination is defined as artificial simulation of human imagination by general or special purpose computers or artificial neural networks.

The term artificial imagination is also used to describe a property of machines or programs: Among some of the traits that researchers hope to simulate using machines include creativity, vision, digital art, humor, satire, etc.

Artificial imagination research uses tools and insights from many fields, including computer science, Rhetoric, psychology, creative arts, philosophy, neuroscience, affective computing, Artificial Intelligence, Artificial intuition, cognitive science, linguistics, operations research, creative writing, probability and logic.

The various practitioners in the field are researching various aspects of Artificial imagination, such as Artificial (visual) imagination,[1] Artificial (aural) Imagination,[2] modeling/filtering content based on human emotions[3] and Interactive Search.[4] Some articles on the topic speculate on how artificial imagination may evolve to create an artificial world which people may not want to leave at all. .[5]

Some researchers in the field, such as G. Schleis and M. Rizki, Dept. of Comput. Sci., Wayne State Univ. have focused on using artificial neural networks for simulating artificial imagination.[6]

The topic of artificial imagination has gotten interest from scholars outside the computer science domain, such as noted communications scholar Ernest Bormann, who came up with the Symbolic Convergence Theory and has worked on a project to develop artificial imagination in computer systems.[7]

How to Build a Mind: Toward Machines with Imagination by Igor Aleksander is a good academic book on the topic. Artificial Imagination,[8] a roman à clef, is a good non-academic book supposedly written by an Artificial imagination system.

References

  1. Visual Information Retrieval Using Synthesized Imagery http://portal.acm.org/ft_gateway.cfm?id=1282303&type=pdf
  2. AUDIO CONTENT TRANSMISSION by Xavier Amatriain & Perfecto Herrera, http://www.iua.upf.es/mtg/publications/dafx2001-xamat.pdf
  3. Is It Out There? The Perspectives of Emotional Information Retrieval from the Internet Resources by R. Rzepka, K. Araki, and K. Tochinai (Japan), 2007 http://actapress.com/PDFViewer.aspx?paperId=25600
  4. An Artificial Imagination for Interactive Search. ICCV-HCI, 4796: 19-28, 2007 by Bart Thomee, Mark J. Huiskes, Erwin M. Bakker and Michael Lew http://dblp.uni-trier.de/db/conf/iccv/iccv-hci2007.html#ThomeeHBL07
  5. Hypertext and “the Hyperreal” by Stuart Moulthrop, Yale University http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?doid=74224.74246
  6. Learning from a random player using the reference neuron model in the Proceedings of the 2002 Congress on Evolutionary Computation, 2002. http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpl/freeabs_all.jsp?arnumber=1007019
  7. Twentieth-Century Roots of Rhetorical Studies, by Jim A. Kuypers and Andrew King, 2001. published by Praeger/Greenwood, page 225.
  8. Artificial Imagination http://www.amazon.com/Artificial-Imagination-Special-Photostory-Washington/dp/098147621X
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