Dear Colleagues,
you are invited to attend a talk by:
Douglas Eck
Research Scientist, Google Brain <
https://research.google.com/teams/brain/>
And former IDSIA post doctoral researcher (2000-2003)
The event will take place at 12h00 on the 9th of June in Room Anfiteatro at SUPSI DTI -
Galleria 2, 6928 Manno.
Abstract
I'll give an overview talk about Magenta <
http://magenta.tensorflow.org/>, a
project investigating music and art generation using deep learning and reinforcement
learning. I'll discuss some of the goals of Magenta and how it fits into the general
trend of AI moving into our daily lives. I'll talk about two specific recent projects.
First I'll discuss our research on Teaching Machines to Draw
<
https://research.googleblog.com/2017/04/teaching-machines-to-draw.html> with
SketchRNN, a LSTM recurrent neural network able to construct stroke-based drawings of
common objects. SketchRNN is trained on thousands of crude human-drawn images representing
hundreds of classes. Second I'll talk about NSynth
<
https://magenta.tensorflow.org/nsynth>, a deep neural network that learns to make
new musical instruments via a WaveNet-style temporal autoencoder. Trained on hundreds of
thousands of musical notes, the model learns to generalize in the space of musical
timbres, allowing musicians to explore new sonic spaces such as sounds that exist
somewhere between a bass guitar and a flute. This will be a high-level overview talk with
no need for prior knowledge of machine learning models such as LSTM or WaveNet.
Short bio
Doug is a Research Scientist at Google leading Magenta
<
http://magenta.tensorflow.org/>, a Google Brain
<
https://research.google.com/teams/brain/> project working to generate music, video,
image and text using deep learning and reinforcement learning. A main goal of Magenta is
to better understanding how AI can enable artists and musicians to express themselves in
innovative new ways. Before Magenta, Doug led the Google Play Music search and
recommendation team. From 2003 to 2010 Doug was an Associate Professor in Computer Science
at the University of Montreal's MILA Machine Learning lab
<
https://mila.umontreal.ca/en/>, where he worked on expressive music performance and
automatic tagging of music audio.