Your Web News in One Place

Help Webnuz

Referal links:

Sign up for GreenGeeks web hosting
March 3, 2018 03:30 pm PST

A neural net that generates weirdly evocative sentences

Robin Sloan, the author of wonderful novels like Mr. Penumbras 24-Hour Bookstore and Sourdough, also spends his time messing around with neural nets that compose and transform language in delightful ways.

His latest experiment? An engine that lets you input two sentences -- and it generates a "sentence gradient": i.e. a bunch of plausible sentences that gradually slide from the meaning of the first one to the meaning of the second one.

The results are pretty surreal, as you can see from sentence-pair above that Robin uses as an example. As he notes ...

So, does that sentence gradient make sense? I honestly dont know. Is it useful? Probably not! But I do know its interesting, and the larger artifactthe continuous sentence spacefeels very much like something worth exploring.

The fun part is you can input your own sentence pairings and see what the system outputs. I did a few, and they're quite surreal, such as ...

Or there's this ...

Then I got the idea to input the first and last sentences of a work of literature. Here's Moby Dick ...

... and here's the American national anthem:

This is pretty mesmerizing, I gotta say.


Original Link: http://feeds.boingboing.net/~r/boingboing/iBag/~3/0tQeQfx99ak/a-neural-net-that-generates-we.html

Share this article:    Share on Facebook
View Full Article