jolene
Large language models and (non-)linguistic recursion
Dąbkowski, Maksymilian, Beguš, Gašper
Recursion is one of the hallmarks of human language. While many design features of language have been shown to exist in animal communication systems, recursion has not. Previous research shows that GPT-4 is the first large language model (LLM) to exhibit metalinguistic abilities (Begu\v{s}, D\k{a}bkowski, and Rhodes 2023). Here, we propose several prompt designs aimed at eliciting and analyzing recursive behavior in LLMs, both linguistic and non-linguistic. We demonstrate that when explicitly prompted, GPT-4 can both produce and analyze recursive structures. Thus, we present one of the first studies investigating whether meta-linguistic awareness of recursion -- a uniquely human cognitive property -- can emerge in transformers with a high number of parameters such as GPT-4.
- North America > United States > New York (0.05)
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Listen to an AI sing an uncannily human rendition of 'Jolene'
AI-powered image generators have been getting most of the press recently. But musical machine learning models have quietly been making great strides in recent years. Holly Herndon has been at the forefront of that revolution. She co-developed (along with partner Mat Dryhurst) Spawn, a singing neural network, for her last album Proto and released Holly (in partnership with Never Before Heard Sounds) to the public last year, which allows anyone to use a model of Holly's voice. Now she's released a new single, where the only vocals come her digital twin.
This Deepfake AI Singing Dolly Parton's "Jolene" Is Worryingly Good
Sorry, but not even Dolly Parton is sacred amid the encroachment of AI into art. Holly Herndon, an avant garde pop musician, has released a cover of Dolly Parton's beloved and frequently covered hit single, "Jolene." Except it's not really Herndon singing, but her digital deepfake twin known as Holly . The music video features a 3D avatar of Holly frolicking in what looks like a decaying digital world. And honestly, it's not bad -- dare we say, almost kind of good?
Listen to an AI sing an uncannily human rendition of 'Jolene'
AI-powered image generators have been getting most of the press recently. But musical machine learning models have quietly been making great strides in recent years. Holly Herndon has been at the forefront of that revolution. She co-developed (along with partner Mat Dryhurst) Spawn, a singing neural network, for her last album Proto and released Holly (in partnership with Never Before Heard Sounds) to the public last year, which allows anyone to use a model of Holly's voice. Now she's released a new single, where the only vocals come her digital twin.