via
https://www.theverge.com/2018/8/26/17778792/deepfakes-video-dancing-ai-synthesis :
Artificial intelligence is proving to be a very capable tool when it comes to manipulating videos of people. Face-swapping deepfakes have been the most visible example, but new applications are being found every day. The latest? Call it deepfakes for dancing. It uses AI to read someone’s dance moves and copy them on to a target body.
The actual science here was done by a quartet of researchers from UC Berkley. As they describe in a paper posted on arXiV, their system is comprised of a number of discrete steps. First, a video of the target is recorded, and a sub-program turns their movements into a stick figure. (Quite of a lot of video is needed to get a good-quality transfer: around 20 minutes of footage at 120 frames per second.) Then, a source video is found and a stick figure made of their movements. Then, the swap happens, with a neural network synthesizing video of the target individual based on the stick figure movements of source.
5 Comments
siftbotsays...Moving this video to blacklotus90's personal queue. It failed to receive enough votes to get sifted up to the front page within 2 days.
eric3579says...*promote
siftbotsays...Promoting this video and sending it back into the queue for one more try; last queued - promote requested by eric3579.
spawnflaggerjokingly says...TRUMP DANCE VIDEOS!
(coming soon, I hope)
rich_magnetsays...I think I've played this game on the Kinect back in 2008. Pretty fun, but I couldn't get a high score...
Discuss...
Enable JavaScript to submit a comment.