AI can identify and design good-looking cars by itself now
MIT developed software that can predict what humans like
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Automakers spend tens of millions of dollars and thousands of hours each year trying to come up with the next popular automotive design, but what if they could do for a fraction of the cost in minutes?
That’s what General Motors and the MIT Sloan School of Management tried to find out in a recent study.
MIT Sloan marketing professor John Hauser told Fox News Digital that a neural network was trained with data collected from General Motors clinics by inputting images and the scores given by attendees.
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DESIGNER EXPLAINS HOW TO MAKE ELECTRIC CARS LOOK COOL
"These were actually evaluations from consumers in theme clinics of what they thought was an aesthetic image," Hauser said.
With just the overall score to work with, the artificial intelligence-driven software used that information to analyze the images and teach itself what is considered an attractive vehicle.
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"We’re building a bot that can look at an image and output an aesthetic rating," Hauser said.
When the system was asked to rate other vehicles, its results were remarkably close to the human responses.
For example, the program predicted that, on a scale of one to five, the 2013 GMC Yukon XL SUV would get a 1.86 score, and the actual rating was 1.84.
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Similarly, the 2013 Infiniti QX80’s predicted rating was 2.93, and its true score was 2.96.
In all, the predictor and consumers were in agreement 74% of the time.
A program was then asked to use this information to design new vehicles that would achieve high aesthetic scores, using 2010-2014 model year vehicles as a reference point, and a funny thing happened.
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It predicted the future.
The programmers were able to set certain parameters, such as "make it Chevy-like" and the class of vehicle but not much detail beyond that.
Nevertheless, some of the results looked almost exactly like what the car companies had on sale in 2020.
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The report highlights the BMW X4M and Mazda CX-30 among the uncannily similar designs the AI came up with, neither of which was even in its automaker's lineup in 2014.
"It doesn’t see the future. Nothing about the future is put into the model," Hauser said.
ArtCenter College of Design professor Chris Chapman, who was previously Hyundai’s head of design in the U.S., said generative technology like this is fast emerging in the design world and that the challenge is using it correctly.
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"In education, you guard against people becoming copyists," Chapman said.
Designing a car that’s aesthetically pleasing sometimes means it’s not very original.
"If you’re a person who complains about cars looking the same right now, it leans into derivations of what’s out there," Chapman said.
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Chapman says it's best used to do some heavy lifting during the design process.
It can provide inspiration and unexpected ideas to work with, but it is ultimately up to the artists to inject originality into the final products and make sure they haven't infringed on anyone's intellectual property.
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"Otherwise, it will generate things people like, but they’re familiar," Chapman said.
"If you immediately like a car, that’s a tell that it won’t be an iconic model that stands the test of time."
He added, "You may sell a lot of cars, but are you going to raise the bar?"
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In the short run, Hauser thinks the rating software can be helpful in guiding a design's direction.
"You’re using the machine to make sure what you’ve designed is aesthetically pleasing," he said.
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Despite the support from General Motors, the software is open source and available for anyone to run with, but not quite ready for prime time.
It requires an expert to operate, and Hauser said further development work will be needed to commercialize it.
"The tool has to be enterprise ready."