Software Combines Thousands of Online Images Into One That Represents Them All
Zothecula writes If you're trying to find out what the common features of tabby cats are, a Google image search will likely yield more results than you'd ever have the time or inclination to look over. New software created at the University of California, Berkeley, however, is designed to make such quests considerably easier. Known as AverageExplorer, it searches out thousands of images of a given subject, then amalgamates them into one composite "average" image.
Can we use it to create an amalgamation of the "average" first post on a /. article?
I dread that the average of all internet photos will be a pornographic picture of a woman with a penis.
With this complex algorithm that takes a fuck-ton of image data and produces for you: something that is almost impossible to tell apart from applying the blur filter on the original image.
So...what the software demonstrates is that if you line up all the pictures of cats by centering them on their noses, you will CLEARLY see...
The rest is blurry and remarkably uninformative.
There needs to be a LOT more intelligence, either machine or human, applied to this before it is remarkable.
If this software searches out all images of a subject and averages them automatically, that means that there's no human control over which images to use and which to reject. Imagine what would happen if you were to let this program loose to create an average image of Shirley Temple. She started in films at the age of three and reached the age of 85, and the software would create an "average image" by mixing images of her as a small child with ones of her as an elderly woman. Even worse, there's a non-alcoholic cocktail named after her, and pictures of it would almost certainly get included.
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Only if "you spin me right round" is playing.