Accessibility links Telegraph. co. uk Friday 05 January 2018 Advertisement Google's artificial intelligence interprets photos as animal faces, with creepy results Engineers run photos through neural network that interprets them as disturbing collections of animal faces Dogs on horse from Google Many of the results are pretty disturbing Photo: Google By James Titcomb 10:48AM BST 02 Jul 2015 Follow Google has been one of the world's biggest backers of artificial intelligence development, investing heavily in machine learning technology, including with last year's acquisition of British company DeepMind. The company is developing "neural networks" that can spot patterns in pictures to identify them. The technology already allows it to recognise animals and faces in its new photos app, for example. However, tweak the network in a certain way, and the results can be rather strange. New: Google unleashes machine dreaming software on the public, nightmarish images flood the internet In an experiment, engineers at Google's research labs ran various pictures through its neural network, asking the software to identify patterns in the images and then alter that image to exaggerate the patterns. In other words, it sees a pattern it thinks it recognises, such as a face or a door, and makes the picture look a little bit more like that thing. The neural network then repeats the process with the altered image. If that happens enough times, it will change a picture radically. In this particular instance, the neural network had largely been trained by pictures of animals, so any image sent through the feedback loop would be returned as a disturbing collage of animal faces. "The results are intriguing—even a relatively simple neural network can be used to over-interpret an image, just like as children we enjoyed watching clouds and interpreting the random shapes," Google engineers Alexander Mordvintsev, Christopher Olah and Mike Tyka said in a blogpost. "This network was trained mostly on images of animals, so naturally it tends to interpret shapes as animals. But because the data is stored at such a high abstraction, the results are an interesting remix of these learned features. " As well as animals, the neural network often interprets points on a long-range image as pagodas or towers. "The results vary quite a bit with the kind of image, because the features that are entered bias the network towards certain interpretations," the authors said. "For example, horizon lines tend to get filled with towers and pagodas. Rocks and trees turn into buildings. Birds and insects appear in images of leaves. " Google is using the artificial intelligence software in its own products (Photos being one example), but the engineers said the techniques could one day be used as a new artform - a new way to remix visual concepts. While that might not be to everyone's tastes, the results are undoubtedly intriguing. The full list of photos are here. Here's what happens to the Google logo. ^(All photos: Google) telegraphsciencetech Follow @telegraphtech Read more from Telegraph Technology Home-made in China Fifty-year-old farmer Chen Lianxue with his homemade plane on the roof of his house in Qifu village of Pingliang, Gansu province, China. The plane took Chen about 28,000 yuan (£2,900) and over two years time to make, local media reported. Ambitious Chinese inventors take on crazy do-it-yourself projects The biggest companies in the world in 2015 The Fortune Global 500 has been released – the annual ranking of the largest companies in the world by revenues. 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