There's been an enormous amount of progress in language-generating AI over the past couple of years. OpenAI's GPT-3, for example, is a language generator that's been trained on 570 GB of text, and is able to write convincing essays. Google, of course, is working on language generators too, and its latest one helps you write like a legendary poet.
Google's new AI tool, Verse by Verse, allows users to compose a poem using "suggestions" from classic American poets. The AI generates these suggestions based on what it's collected from reading the poets' oeuvres. That is, the program uses machine-learning algorithms (算法) to identify the language patterns of a particular poet's work, then applies those to text it generates as the suggestions.
The tool works by allowing users to select from 22 American poets for the suggestions, including legends like Walt Whitman, Emily Dickinson, and Edgar Allen Poe. After a user has selected up to three poets, they then pick the type of poem they'd like to write. The program offers various poetic forms, and even allows users to select the number of syllables per line.
Users then give the program a first line, and AI generates the rest of the poem. The AI makes suggestions line by line, however, making it more interactive than other top language generator s out there. As far as results, they're interesting, but not nearly as impressive as GPT-3's writings.
According to Google engineer Dave Uthus, "The system was trained to have a general understanding of what lines of verse would best follow a previous line of verse. So even if you write on topics not commonly seen in classic poetry, the system will try its best to make lines that are relevant. The widely varying degrees of Verse by Verse output quality show that while good lyrical gems (宝石) may occasionally emerge, further work by the AI team remains to be done."