黑料老司机

黑料老司机 alumna publishes AI-art children檚 book with a new plant-based take on classic Old MacDonald rhymes

Alayt Ablam 21

In February, 黑料老司机 alumna Alayt Ablam 21 and current predoctoral fellow at The Grainger College of Engineering at The University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, along with her advisor and co-author Lav Varshney, published an artificial intelligence-illustrated children檚 book, Young McDonald Had a Botanical Farm. The book is a new take on the classic rhymes of 淥ld MacDonald. In the place of an animal, each verse is reimagined with a fruit or vegetable.

Ablam, a mathematics major and studio art minor, said the inspiration for this AI-illustrated children檚 book came one night as Varshney, an associate professor in electrical and computer engineering at U of I, was reading a bedtime story to his children. The subject of the book was conceived in a research meeting about plant communication. 淰arshney was inspired to write poetry that resonated with the conversations we were there to decipher, said Ablam. 淗e then sent me the poetry, and I made the art inspired by the verses on the poem.

In order to create the AI art featured in the book, Ablam used a VQGAN+CLIP architecture. VQGAN, a 渧ector quantized generative adversarial network, can generate new images when given existing input, and CLIP, or 淐ontrastive Image-Language Pretraining, which is a neural network trained on a variety of image and text pairs, helps VQGAN understand the images that it檚 trying to create. 淰QGAN generates iteratively, and CLIP guides the images via the prompts so the images are more in line with what you want, Ablam explains. For each image, Ablam edited the prompt to match her desired output, and then ran the program a thousand times and picked her favorite of the images. This process is a part of an emerging field of tech known as human-AI interaction. 淎I is a tool, and you are the artist, Ablam explains, 渂oth verbally (the way you write the prompt) and visually (the image you pick).

Ablam檚 interest in AI began with her senior I.S. project, which asked what it means to understand a concept in a visual format. She sourced knowledge from semantic vectors that hold the understanding of words people use in everyday language and incorporated them into an algorithm known as Generative Adversarial Networks to generate visually indeterminate images for concepts that are obscure to imagine. This process questioned the creativity of the machine, and it was while doing the literature review for her I.S. that Ablam encountered two papers by Varshney. 淚 was utterly captivated, she said, 渟o I reached out, and here I am.

Young McDonald Had a Botanical Farm was released in February 2022, and the proceeds of book sales will be donated to nonprofit organizations in Ablam檚 home country of Ethiopia. Initial proceeds will go to SOS, a global health non-profit, for humanitarian work in Tigray, while others will promote agricultural research through the Bethel Agricultural Association, 渂oth of which are within the essence of the book, Ablam says.

Posted in Alumni on May 24, 2022.


Related Posts

Art history alumna highlights the history of presidential architecture

Hannah Samuell 09 portrait

Studio art major flies high touring with Cirque du Soleil

Scott Bloom 94, a biology alum from The College, found his passion in education.

Biology alumnus feels at home in educational leadership


Related Areas of Study

Art - Studio Art

Studio space, small classes with talented instructors, and the strong foundation that comes with a liberal arts education.

Major Minor

Mathematics

Numbers + patterns + structures multiplied by a zest for analysis and inquiry

Major Minor

Computer Science

Solve complex problems with creative solutions using computer programming and applications

Major Minor

Connect with 黑料老司机