I think that’s what I had in mind. One of the “image enhancement” demos takes a heavily pixelated face and gives a high quality image of a face — which may look little like the real face. Another takes the top half of a picture and fills in the bottom half. In both cases it’s just making up something which may be plausible given the input, but no more plausible than any of countless possible extrapolations.
I think that’s what I had in mind. One of the “image enhancement” demos takes a heavily pixelated face and gives a high quality image of a face — which may look little like the real face. Another takes the top half of a picture and fills in the bottom half. In both cases it’s just making up something which may be plausible given the input, but no more plausible than any of countless possible extrapolations.