Google figured out how to turn pixelated images into high
You see it all the time in movies and TV shows: A security camera records footage of an intruder, but the image is too blurry or pixelated to make out who it is.
Some nerdy-looking "hacker" then clacks at his keyboard and -- boom -- seconds later, pixelated image turns into a crisp one revealing the person's face in glorious detail.
"Oh, come on!" we all say while rolling our eyes. Well, you might have to break that habit because Google has figured out a way to turn movie magic into reality (sort of).
SEE ALSO:Google's biggest Android problem is also ruining emojiAccording to ArsTechnica, researchers at Google's deep learning research project, Google Brain, have created software that attempts to "sharpen" images made up of 8 x 8 pixels.
Of course, Google Brain's software can't actually enhance the original block of pixels. Instead, what it's doing is using machine learning to try to guesswhat the original image might be if it had been downsized to 64 pixels.
Google Brain's software does this with two stages of neural network training. The first stage involves a "conditioning network" that cross references the 8 x 8 pixelated image with similar-looking images that are higher resolution and then downsized, checking for patterns and colors, as you can see below:
From left to right:Credit: screenshot: google brainThe second stage, called the "prior network" then uses details from high-resolution images to try to fill out the low-resolution images.
Finally, the images produced from both neural network training sessions are then composited together to create the best approximationof what the original image might be.
Google Brains' software isn't technically "zoom and enhance" magic, but according to the researchers' findings, it comes damn close and the "enhanced" images are good enough to fool most people.
Squint hard and you might think the "hallucinations" (Google Brain generated images based on the training) are enhanced versions of the low-res images, too. They could have fooled me.
Featured Video For You
This Japanese home assistant is a holographic girl that lives in a jar
TopicsGoogle
(责任编辑:行业动态)
- [Online Predators] Deepfake pornography haunts S. Korea
- 温氏吴珍芳:猪基因组育种技术研究前景广阔,值得推广
- 农业科技特派员上线,投身“百千万工程”
- 老旧大院改善明显 居民思想观念转变
- Is Mercury retrograde messing with you? Think again.
- 芦山县消防救援大队为民解忧勇摘马蜂窝
- 攻坚克难 奋勇前行 持续做好道路抢通保通工作
- 手机信用卡业务增长势头强劲
- [Online Predators] Deepfake pornography haunts S. Korea
- 省扫黑除恶专项斗争第9督导组召开重点案件汇报会和政法干警扫黑除恶专项斗争工作座谈会
- 注意!8月起,这些大事将影响每个青岛人!
- 澹崇墝鐭虫补钀藉瓙闈掑矝甯傚崡 涓栫晫500寮轰紒涓氳揪48瀹禵涓浗灞变笢缃慱闈掑矝
- Apple's iPhone 17 will come with a huge RAM upgrade, report claims
- 雅安动植物基因库——白鹇