A partnership with OpenAI will let podcasters replicate their voices to automatically create foreign-language versions of their shows.

  • FireWire400
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    481 year ago

    That’s just weird… Part of the reason I listen to podcasts is that I just enjoy people talking about things and AI voices still have this uncanny quality to me

      • @[email protected]
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        21 year ago

        That’s obviously way better than any TTS before it, but I still wouldn’t want to listen to it for more than a few minutes. In these two sentences I can already hear some of the “AI quirks” and the longer you listen, the more you start to notice them.
        I listen to a lot of AI celeb impersonations and they all sound like the same machine with different voice synthesizers. There’s something about the prosody that gives it away, every sentence has the same generic pattern.
        Humans are generally more creative, or more monotonous, but AI is in a weird inbetween space where it’s never interested and never bored, always soulless.

        • @[email protected]
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          21 year ago

          Having listened to it, I could not identify any sort of “AI quirk”. It sounded perfectly fine.

    • @[email protected]
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      161 year ago

      A large language model took a 3 second snippet of a voice and extrapolated from that the whole spoken English lexicon from that voice in a way that was indistinguishable from the real person to banking voice verification algorithms.

      We are so far beyond what you think of when we say the word AI, because we replaced the underlying thing that it is without most people realizing it. The speed of large language models progress at current is mind boggling.

      These models when shown FMRI data for a patient, can figure out what image the patient is looking at, and then render it. Patient looks at a picture of a giraffe in a jungle, and the model renders it having never before seen a giraffe… from brain scan data, in real time.

      Not good enough? The same FMRI data was examined in real time by a large language model while a patient was watching a short movie and asked to think about what they saw in words. The sentence the person thought, was rendered as English sentences by the model, in real time, looking at fMRI data.

      That’s a step from reading dreams and that too will happen inside 20 months.

      We, are very much there.

      • @[email protected]
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        91 year ago

        I don’t think what you’re saying is possible. Voxels used in fMRI measure in millimeters (down to one of I recall) and don’t allow for such granular analysis. It is possible to ‘see’ what a person sees but the image doesn’t resemble the original too closely.

        At least that’s what I have learned a few years ago. I’m happy to look at new sources, if you have some though.

        • @[email protected]
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          01 year ago

          Seeing Beyond the Brain: Conditional Diffusion Model with Sparse Masked Modeling for Vision Decoding: https://aiimpacts.org/2022-expert-survey-on-progress-in-ai/

          High-resolution image reconstruction with latent diffusion models from human brain activity: https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2022.11.18.517004v3

          Semantic reconstruction of continuous language from non-invasive brain recordings: https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2022.09.29.509744v1

        • @[email protected]
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          -11 year ago

          I like how I said, the problem is progress is moving so far you don’t even realize what you don’t know about the subject as a layman… and then this comment appears saying things are not possible.

          Lol.

          How timely.

          I the speed at which things are changing and redefining what is possible in this space is moving faster than any other are of research. It’s insane to the point that if you are not actively reading white papers every day, you miss major advances.

          The layman had this idea of what “AI” means, but we have truly no good way to make the word align to its meaning and capabilities with how fast we change what it means underneath.

          • @[email protected]
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            1 year ago

            I looked at your sources or at least one of them. The problem is, that, as you said, I am a layman at least when it comes To AI. I do know how fMRI works though.

            And I stand corrected. Some of those pictures do closely resemble the original. Impressive, although not all subjects seem to produce the same level of detail and accuracy. Unfortunately, I have no way to verify the AI side of the paper. It is mind boggling that such images can be constructed from voxels of such size. 1.8mm contain close to 100k neurons and even more synapses. And the fMRI signal itself is only ablood oxygen level overshoot in these areas and no direct measurement of neural activity. It makes me wonder what constraints and tricks had to be used to generate these images. I guess combining the semantic meaning of the image in combination with the broader image helped. Meaning inferring pixel color (e.g. Mostly blue with some gray on the middle) and then adding the sematic meaning (plane) to then combine these two.

            Truly amazing, but I do remain somewhat sceptical.

            • @[email protected]
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              11 year ago

              The model inferred meaning much the same way it infers meaning from text. Short phrases can generate intricate images accurate to author intent using stable diffusion.

              The models themselves in those studies leveraged stable diffusion as the mechanism of image generation, but instead of text prompts, they use fMRI data training.

      • @Not_mikey
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        41 year ago

        Interesting and scary to think ai understands the black box of human neurology more than we understand the black box of ai.

    • rigatti
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      71 year ago

      It won’t take long until that uncanny quality is worked out.

      • danielbln
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        61 year ago

        Imho it has already been worked out. There is probably selection bias at play as you don’t even recognize the AI voices that are already there.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 year ago

        Following up on the other comment.

        The issue is that widely available speech models are not yet offering the quality that is technically possible. That is probably why you think we’re not there yet. But we are.

        Oh, I’m looking forward to just translate a whole audiobook into my native language and any speaking style I like.

        Okay, perhaps we would still have difficulties with made up fantasy words or words from foreign languages with little training data.

        Mind, this is already possible. It’s just that I don’t have access to this technology. I sincerely hope that there will be no gatekeeping to the training data, such that we can train such models ourselves.