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AI Technology

AI Can Generate a 3D Model of a Person After Watching a Few Seconds of Video (sciencemag.org) 43

An anonymous reader shares a report: A new algorithm creates 3D models using standard video footage from one angle. The system has three stages. First, it analyzes a video a few seconds long of someone moving -- preferably turning 360-degree to show all sides -- and for each frame creates a silhouette separating the person from the background. Based on machine learning techniques -- in which computers learn a task from many examples -- it roughly estimates the 3D body shape and location of joints. In the second stage, it "unposes" the virtual human created from each frame, making them all stand with arms out in a T shape, and combines information about the T-posed people into one, more accurate model. Finally, in the third stage, it applies color and texture to the model based on recorded hair, clothing, and skin.
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AI Can Generate a 3D Model of a Person After Watching a Few Seconds of Video

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  • Assuming that it can be made to run on home computers, that is.
  • Based on the video, what we should really be working on is how to make such models move like a real human.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Based on the video, what we should really be working on is how to make such models move like a real human.

      And yet another reason I grow to hate AI. It easily brings as much bad as good, if not more.

      Simply put, once you have an accurate model of a human, that you can't easily tell from a real one, then you just green screen an actor with the same basic body shape and positioning pads in a camera, and we have "proof" of whatever you wanted proof of.

      Perhaps you could still spot such fakes today, but for how much longer? And, really, how many people would notice even today? I know this isn't the first story that

      • Hating the inevitable doesn't seem very useful. It isn't "what if", it's "when".

      • Yes, hardware on blockchain, distributed so no one can be "ministry of truth". Video editing software then must publish their source videos, with veracity to be trusted, and final product also checksumed on chain.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Well, the terrorists in Douma didn't even need automatic 3D scan or AI. They only needed to spread the rumor of a chemical attack, film panicked people dousing each other with water, fetch a few corpses of babies and add them to the "movie stage".
        This requires to have a few suffocating people (they had inhaled smoke due to being in a war zone) and a few dead babies around.

        Then, everyone can call the US, UK and France for their bullshit. But will the journalist and their so-called free press dare question th

    • by flux ( 5274 )

      There exists some pretty compelling research on having a 3d model walk a complicated terrain in a natural looking fashion.

      But I was unable to find the video :(. It probably isn't older than a year or so..

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Doesn't seem like it has much to do with artificial intelligence.

    Neat scanner program, though.

    • Presumably, this is domain-specific: it seems to use the limited information available to solve a constraint problem. So it's not just a scanner program.
  • ...In the next stage the system uses the phenotype information shown in the video combined with the 99.9999% shared genetic information between all humans to create a nearly exact genome for the person. ...In the final step the AI system uses your likes, preferences, cookie trails and other information gleaned from your online life to fill in the life experience portion and recreate your personality.

    This all allows the marketers to then pinpoint your exact weaknesses to advertising so that you BUY, BUY, BUY

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Watching a video and from that being able to build a 3d model of a person.... ....is something that normally requires intelligence. Rocks can't do it. Neither can plants. Nor steam engines.

      This fits the definition of Artificial Intelligence exactly.

      You just have some kind of chip on your shoulder.

  • This is one step closer to the computer generated porn.

    • It isn't useful till it can differentiate the booty between Jessica Alba in Idle Hands and Jessica Biel. Until then body modeling is only a vague suggestion that people are different.

      Locating the joints automatically is nust a step above marking them manually and using a generic body.

  • This is actually one of the advances I had predicted many years ago. The next steps are interesting but ultimately you end up with what I refer to as "Rapid Physical Modeling" where in you can take an object, do a quick 360 view of it and then capture it's physical properties by manipulating it. A simple example is demonstrating how a potted plant can bend and it's ability to bend and spring back are inferred. The obvious benefit of this is that you can quickly model things with complex interactive respo

  • Even the summary describes it as a [learning] algorithm. Yes, it's bloody impressive, but it's an algorithm tuned to execute one specific task. If anything it's an Artificial Savant [wikipedia.org].

  • A new algorithm creates 3D models using standard video footage from one angle. The system has three stages. First, it analyzes a video a few seconds long of someone moving -- preferably turning 360-degree to show all sides

    That's not one angle, then, is it?

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