3 Questions: How AI image generators could help robots
Yilun Du, a PhD student and MIT CSAIL affiliate, discusses the potential applications of generative art beyond the explosion of images that put the web into creative hysterics.
Yilun Du, a PhD student and MIT CSAIL affiliate, discusses the potential applications of generative art beyond the explosion of images that put the web into creative hysterics.
Researchers develop a new method that uses multiple models to create more complex images with better understanding.
MIT researchers create KineCAM, an instant camera that yields images that appear to move.
MIT undergraduates whose research areas explore artificial intelligence, space, and climate change honored for their academic achievements.
CSAIL's SprayableTech system lets users create large-scale interactive surfaces with sensors and displays using airbrushed inks.
In place of flat “breadboards,” 3D-printed CurveBoards enable easier testing of circuit design on electronics products.
CSAIL system could help athletes, dancers, and others better analyze how they move.
CSAIL system converts 3-D movies into a more TV-friendly format.
Prototype display enables viewers to watch a 3-D movie from any seat in a theater.
Algorithms could offer new tools for graphics software or reveal structural defects.
Exploiting video game software yields broadcast-quality 3-D video of soccer games in real time.
A simulation technology from movies is used to predict coiling patterns in the lab.
Algorithm can determine, with 80 percent accuracy, whether video is running forward or backward.
After doing groundbreaking work in computational photography, the Media Lab researcher has trained his sights on inventing ‘brand new disciplines.’
Digitally mimicking the photographic blur caused by moving objects is surprisingly hard, but new research offers ways to make it easier.