AI pareidolia: Can machines spot faces in inanimate objects?
MIT CSAIL researchers have introduced a human-labeled dataset of pareidolic faces found in everyday objects, revealing key differences between human and AI face detection and discovering a mathematical "Goldilocks zone" where pareidolia is most likely to occur.
MIT CSAIL researchers have introduced a human-labeled dataset of pareidolic faces found in everyday objects, revealing key differences between human and AI face detection and discovering a mathematical "Goldilocks zone" where pareidolia is most likely to occur.
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