Particle Swarm Optimization for Picture Analysis
Roland Piquepaille writes "Particle swarm optimization (PSO) is a computer algorithm based on a mathematical model of the social interactions of swarms which was first described in 1995. Now, researchers in the UK and Jordan have carried this swarm approach to photography to 'intelligently boost contrast and detail in an image without distorting the underlying features.' This looks like a clever concept even if I haven't seen any results. The researchers have developed an iterative process where a swarm of images are created by a computer. These images are 'graded relative to each other, the fittest end up at the front of the swarm until a single individual that is the most effectively enhanced.'"
I love an article on digital imaging technology that has no pictures. This is 2008. Send out your press release with a photo...of something...anything.
Careful What You Wish For....
it has to know *specifically* what makes that picture better. Why not use that knowledge to jump to the best picture (that it can define) from the first picture?
Because the algorithm doesn't have that kind of knowledge. In AI-based search we don't know how to define absolute functions of quality, but we know how to define (several) relative dimensions of improvement. (Disclaimer - I do this for a living).
Intelligent search is based on iteratively improving one of those dimensions, just a little bit, one at a time. This goes on until we find a solution that is as good as we can get in all dimensions at once; but we simply don't know how to combine all dimensions to create a formula that maximizes all them, because their relative improvements interact with each other in complex, chaotic ways.
Singularity: a belief in the "God" idea with the "demiurge" relation inverted.