Michal Ptaszynski | プタシンスキ ミハウ
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ptaszynski.bsky.social
Michal Ptaszynski | プタシンスキ ミハウ
@ptaszynski.bsky.social
Japan, AI, NLP | Professor @ Kitami Institute of Technology | Senior member #IEEE | Automatic #Cyberbullying Detection | #Ainu Language Processing | #Coffee Science | linktr.ee/ptaszynski
You can publish in journals for free/with subscription and then just release your preedited version on arxiv and you’ll have best of both worlds. 💁🏻‍♂️
March 22, 2025 at 8:25 AM
Why do they want this?
March 22, 2025 at 1:19 AM
You have a choice. You can freely choose to send all of your research directly to arxiv and not use any peer-review venue ever again. Maybe start by asking - why won’t you do it yourself?
March 22, 2025 at 12:26 AM
“no gaffes, no policy missteps” - dear god, imagine if this is the actual bar for political relations these days.
February 12, 2025 at 10:45 PM
Let’s delve into that. 😄
January 30, 2025 at 11:17 AM
With pleasure! I might even be able to find the necessary number of people.
January 30, 2025 at 11:15 AM
Hi Brandon, good to see you hear as well. 🙂
December 7, 2024 at 11:51 AM
👍
November 20, 2024 at 7:56 PM
👍
November 20, 2024 at 7:55 PM
So - Mori was wrong in his "The Uncanny Valley" paper. It seems he was imagining things from his own perspective, rather than taking into account the progress of technology and society.
But, on the bright side - your next Siri will be more naturally emotional. ☺️
November 20, 2024 at 1:36 PM
And if you think of it, it's actually quite obvious. Technology is always developing, so by the time there actually are life-like humanoid robots to use at home, we will be well acquainted with them not to feel uncanny with them (although spoiler - its pure sci-fi AI-robot-hype).
November 20, 2024 at 1:36 PM
This also confirms my own theory.
It shows that when people obtain a new technology, (1) they already know the technology a bit and (2) prefer to smoothly adopt it, focusing on its overall utility rather than minor imperfections.
Thus - the theory of Uncanny Valley is incorrect.
November 20, 2024 at 1:36 PM
Whats more, you can just train a voice model from scratch only on artificial data - it will be worse, but still perfectly usable (!).
This result for Japanese language holds up for basically all age groups, genders, nationalities, even for people who don't know Japanese (!).
November 20, 2024 at 1:36 PM
You do not need to collect huge high quality datasets for each emotion to produce a good emotional voice. Just use a raw voice model and fine-tune it for specific emotion(s) on small emotional data - even artificial data (!). The emotions will still be perfectly understandable.
November 20, 2024 at 1:35 PM