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  2. Generative systems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generative_systems

    Generative systems are technologies with the overall capacity to produce unprompted change driven by large, varied, and uncoordinated audiences. [1] When generative systems provide a common platform, changes may occur at varying layers (physical, network, application, content) and provide a means through which different firms and individuals may cooperate indirectly and contribute to innovation.

  3. Generative artificial intelligence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generative_artificial...

    The capabilities of a generative AI system depend on the modality or type of the data set used. Generative AI can be either unimodal or multimodal; unimodal systems take only one type of input, whereas multimodal systems can take more than one type of input. [59] For example, one version of OpenAI's GPT-4 accepts both text and image inputs. [60]

  4. Generative design - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generative_Design

    Generative design is an iterative design process that uses software to generate outputs that fulfill a set of constraints iteratively adjusted by a designer. Whether a human, test program, or artificial intelligence , the designer algorithmically or manually refines the feasible region of the program's inputs and outputs with each iteration to ...

  5. Generative pre-trained transformer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generative_pre-trained...

    Generative pretraining (GP) was a long-established concept in machine learning applications. [16] [17] It was originally used as a form of semi-supervised learning, as the model is trained first on an unlabelled dataset (pretraining step) by learning to generate datapoints in the dataset, and then it is trained to classify a labelled dataset.

  6. Generativity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generativity

    Generativity in technology is defined as “the ability of a technology platform or technology ecosystem to create, generate or produce new output, structure or behavior without input from the originator of the system.” [2] An example of this could be any computing platform, such as the iOS and Android mobile operating systems, for which ...

  7. Generative adversarial network - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generative_adversarial_network

    A generative adversarial network (GAN) is a class of machine learning frameworks and a prominent framework for approaching generative artificial intelligence. The concept was initially developed by Ian Goodfellow and his colleagues in June 2014. [ 1 ]

  8. Generative science - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generative_science

    Generative science is an area of research that explores the natural world and its complex behaviours. It explores ways "to generate apparently unanticipated and infinite behaviour based on deterministic and finite rules and parameters reproducing or resembling the behavior of natural and social phenomena". [ 1 ]

  9. Generative model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generative_model

    For example, GPT-3, and its precursor GPT-2, [11] are auto-regressive neural language models that contain billions of parameters, BigGAN [12] and VQ-VAE [13] which are used for image generation that can have hundreds of millions of parameters, and Jukebox is a very large generative model for musical audio that contains billions of parameters.