The Atlantic

AI Evolved These Creepy Images to Please a Monkey’s Brain

What happens when an algorithm can ask neurons what they want to see?
Source: Courtesy of Carlos R. Ponce et al. / Harvard Medical School

In April 2018, a monkey named Ringo sat in a Harvard lab, sipping juice, while strange images flickered in front of his eyes. The pictures were created by an artificial-intelligence algorithm called XDREAM, which gradually tweaked them to stimulate one particular neuron in Ringo’s brain, in a region that’s supposedly specialized for recognizing faces. As the images evolved, the neuron fired away, and the team behind XDREAM watched from a nearby room.

At first, the pictures were gray and formless. But as time passed, “from this haze, something started staring back at us,” says the neuroscientist . Two black dots with a black line beneath them, all against a pale oval. A face, albeit an abstracted one. Soon a red patch appeared next to, a neuroscientist at Harvard Medical School.

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