【Han Yi-seul-I (한이슬) Archives】
Deep inside an MIT laboratory,Han Yi-seul-I (한이슬) Archives an artificially intelligent bot is composing ghastly tales of nightmarish creatures and strange shrieks in the night.
MIT researchers named their bot Shelley (after Frankenstein author Mary Shelley). They endowed her with an artificial mind, called a neural network, an advanced form of machine learning in which a computer learns a task by relying on training examples. In Shelley's case, MIT researchers fed her silicon brain 140,000 horror stories published by writers on Reddit's "No Sleep" forum.
SEE ALSO: We asked an expert about the worst (and grossest) movie virusesEndowed with this massive story bank of fright, Shelley is a program that churns out its own unique tales of the undead and soon-to-be dead.
"She's creating really interesting and weird stories that have never really existed in the horror genre," Pinar Yanardag, a researcher at the MIT Media Lab, told the Associated Press. Pinar gives the example of a man who awakes in a hospital bed to find he's pregnant.
Another of Shelley's stories begins: I had no choice but to get out. I turned around and saw my mom. She had a menacing look on her face, holding a small box with my dad'sstuffed animals in it.
But Shelleydoesn'tjustconcoct fictional dread by herself. Her MIT creators encourage Twitter users to interact with the hell-bot. Each hour, Shelley tweets the beginning lines to a story. Real humans can reply with the story's next lines, which Shelley will read and add to.
Shelley's MIT creators hope her autonomously-generated text will provide answers to an important question about AI: "Can machines learn to scare us?"
As the machine receives more feedback from interactions from humans, it learns how to fashion authentic terror — or at least, that's how it's designed. This isn't too different from AI neural networks learning to render realistic faces or dominate popular board games.
Shelley may not be truly terrifying just yet. But beware: In the deep witching hours when you're asleep, she's wide awake — and training to become even more horrifying.
Featured Video For You
'Stranger Things' wants you to turn your Eggo box into creepy DIY costumes
Topics Artificial Intelligence
Search
Categories
Latest Posts
The Best CPU & GPU Purchases of 2017
2025-06-27 01:16Google has a new central blog called Keyword
2025-06-27 00:32Oculus updates Gear VR app after severe battery drain issues
2025-06-27 00:22Popular Posts
Hillary Clinton tears Trump apart with 9 tweets
2025-06-27 00:14Featured Posts
Ms. Frizzle spotted at Science Marches across the globe
2025-06-27 01:15Weight loss app counts calories with your food pics
2025-06-26 23:57Popular Articles
Best Presidents' Day deal: Save $44 on Fitbit Charge 6
2025-06-27 00:51Uber to make it easier for drivers to own a car in India
2025-06-27 00:16Tips for Playing PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds
2025-06-26 23:03Newsletter
Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest updates.
Comments (42228)
Star Sky Information Network
Touring Logitech's Audio HQ
2025-06-27 01:07Acceleration Information Network
Young Dodgers fan does 50 push
2025-06-27 00:23Habit Information Network
7 questions to ask before switching cell phone carriers
2025-06-26 23:04Pursuit Information Network
This robot will look after your kids so you don't have to
2025-06-26 22:52Charm Information Network
Touring Logitech's Audio HQ
2025-06-26 22:50