Like Copying a Pattern from a Small Piece
Think of it as having a tiny tile that shows you what a whole floor looks like, but instead of repeating the same tile over and over, the AI cleverly changes each copy so it still feels real. It's kind of like when you copy a drawing from a small part of a bigger picture, but you make sure each copied piece fits with its neighbors.
The AI Learns the Rules
The AI looks at the small pattern, maybe just a few squares of fabric or a bit of bark, and learns what makes that texture special. It figures out how colors and shapes change from one part to another, like learning the rhythm of a song by listening to just a short piece.
Then it uses that knowledge to create a much bigger version, like turning a small puzzle piece into an entire puzzle! And all without needing every single detail from the start.
Examples
- A robot copies a fabric's look over a large area using tiny, repeated pieces.
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See also
- Are Programmers Obsolete? Will AI Replace Them?
- AI Literacy: How do AI Image Generators Work?
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- Can AI chatbots secretly insert ads into their responses?