homehome Home chatchat Notifications


New AI algorithm can transform blurry faces into sharp portraits

The algorithm can produce sharp images from blurred images, but there's a catch: the faces aren't real.

Mihai Andrei
June 17, 2020 @ 6:47 pm

share Share

A novel algorithm can turn blurry, unrecognizable pictures of people’s faces into eerily convincing portraits. The AI creates realistic-looking faces with up to 64 times the resolution of the blurred images.

While the AI does not produce an exact replica of the initial portrait and it sometimes reimagines features that weren’t there in the first place, the end result is remarkably close to reality.

“Never have super-resolution images been created at this resolution before with this much detail,” said Duke computer scientist Cynthia Rudin, who led the team.

It’s not the first time researchers have worked to recreate the faces behind blurred images. Traditional algorithms, however, are ‘trained’. They take a low-resolution image and try to add extra pixels by guessing what would fit. The end result is a plausible average, but relatively low-quality. The pixels filled in by the algorithm tend to be a decent, but not perfect fit, typically producing fuzzy and indistinct images.

But this novel AI opts for a different approach.

Instead of adding detail to a low-resolution image, the system scours a database of artificial, AI-generated faces, looking for the ones that look the most like the blurred image. The AI is then confronted by another AI, in what is called a “generative adversarial network” (or GAN).

This second AI confronts the first one, trying to find errors in the produced face. The first network gets better and better, and when the second one can’t tell the difference between the blurred image and the produced face. Even given pixelated photos where the eyes and mouth are barely recognizable, “our algorithm still manages to do something with it, which is something that traditional approaches can’t do,” said co-author Alex Damian ’20, a Duke math major.

Image credits: Duke University.

Remarkably, the resulting faces aren’t actually real — which, researchers say, means that it can’t be used to identify people. It can’t turn an out-of-focus security camera photo into an image of a real person. Instead, what it does is generate a new face that doesn’t exist, but looks like the image.

Meet the authors: Sachit Menon, Alex Damian, McCourt Hu, Nikhil Ravi and Cynthia Rudin. Here’s what they looked like, and how the AI reconstructed their face from a single blurred image. The similarities are clear, but the end result is a different image (look at the last image to see just how different they can be). Image Credits: Duke University

Instead, researchers say the same technique could be used on something other than faces, creating sharp, realistic images from a number of images, including (but not limited to) satellite imagery, microscopy, astronomy, and medical imaging.

See the results and upload images for yourself at http://pulse.cs.duke.edu/. Journal Reference: PULSE: Self-Supervised Photo Upsampling via Latent Space Exploration of Generative Models, arXiv:2003.03808 [cs.CV] arxiv.org/abs/2003.03808

share Share

Scientists Say Junk Food Might Be as Addictive as Drugs

This is especially hurtful for kids.

The 400-Year-Old, Million-Dollar Map That Put China at the Center of the World

In 1602, the Wanli Emperor of the Ming dynasty had a big task for his scholars: a map that would depict the entire world. The results was a monumental map that would forever change China’s understanding of its place in the world. Known as the Kunyu Wanguo Quantu (坤輿萬國全圖), or A Map of the Myriad […]

A New AI Can Spot You by How Your Body Bends a Wi-Fi Signal

You don’t need a phone or camera to be tracked anymore: just wi-fi.

7,000 Steps a Day Keep the Doctor Away

Just 7,000 steps a day may lower your risk of death, dementia, and depression.

Scientists transform flossing into needle-free vaccine

In the not-too-distant future, your dentist might do more than remind you to floss—they might vaccinate you, too.

Golden Oyster Mushroom Are Invasive in the US. They're Now Wreaking Havoc in Forests

Golden oyster mushrooms, with their sunny yellow caps and nutty flavor, have become wildly popular for being healthy, delicious and easy to grow at home from mushroom kits. But this food craze has also unleashed an invasive species into the wild, and new research shows it’s pushing out native fungi. In a study we believe […]

The World’s Most "Useless" Inventions (That Are Actually Pretty Useful)

Every year, the Ig Nobel Prize is awarded to ten lucky winners. To qualify, you need to publish research in a peer-reviewed journal that is considered "improbable": studies that make people laugh and think at the same time.

This Ancient Greek City Was Swallowed by the Sea—and Yet Refused to Die

A 3,000-year record of resilience, adaptation, and seismic survival

Low testosterone isn't killing your libido. Sugar is

Small increases in blood sugar can affect sperm and sex, even without diabetes

There might be an anti-aging secret hiding in magic mushrooms

Psilocybin extends cell life, and preserves aging DNA structures.