Projektmodul / Project Module
Synthetic Media for Parallel Hyperrealities
Instructor: Vertr.-Prof. Jason Reizner
Credits: 18 ECTS, 16 SWS
Capacity: max. 12 students
Language: English
Date: Plenum: Tuesdays, 13:30-17:00; Consultations by appointment
Location: Online/Marienstraße 7b
First Meeting: 12 April 2022, 13:30 on BBB
(Link to online meeting will be sent to accepted participants by email.)
BISON Course ID: [TBA]
Description
The simulacrum is never that which conceals the truth
– it is the truth which conceals that there is none.
The simulacrum is true.
– Jean Baudrillard, Simulacres et Simulation, 1981
In a world where machines have become more than capable of autonomously generating (seemingly) credible newspaper articles, danceable techno tracks, adorable cat memes and plausible Nicolas Cage videos, the ability to algorithmically produce and transform digital media forms – so-called deepfakes – has arrived on the desktops and devices of millions. This project module focuses not on the demise of the distinction between real and rendered, but on a future where this distinction becomes increasingly blurred and irrelevant.
Through a series of lectures, workshops and targeted discussions, participants will address topics including human and artificial intelligence, generative and autonomous systems, supervised and unsupervised machine learning, neural networks, GANs and hyperreality, and will engage with state-of-the-art tools and methodologies for the synthetic production of text, images and audiovisual media.
Admission requirements
Enrollment in MKG/MAD MFA or MediaArchitecture MSc programs
Application and registration procedure
Application with CV and Statement of Motivation to jason.reizner [ät] uni-weimar.de
Evaluation
Successful completion of the course is dependent on regular attendance, active participation, completion of assignments and delivery of a relevant semester prototype and documentation. Please refer to the Evaluation Rubric for more details.
Eligible participants
MFA Medienkunst/-gestaltung, MFA Media Art and Design, MSc MediaArchitecture candidates
Platforms and Tools
This Wiki
BigBlueButton (only as necessary)
Cisco WebEx
Are.na
MURAL
Miro
Google Jamboard
Syllabus (subject to change)
12 April 2022 / Week 1
Introduction
Course Organization
Administrative Housekeeping
Assignment: If you have not done so already, for next week please review the following chapter:
"Simulacra and Simulations" by Jean Baudrillard
and prepare for next week's experiment 'New Identity, Who Dis?' by adding your GAN-generated avatar and persona profile to the Miro board
19 April 2022 / Week 2
Fake Synthetic Media
Speculative Narratives
Assignment: Please watch F for Fake (Orson Welles, 1975) and complete part II of the avatar experiment as discussed in class. Be ready to talk for two or three minutes about your preliminary project ideas during next week's roundtable.
26 April 2022 / Week 3
Project Roundtable I
Assignment: For next week, please review the following texts: "Machine learning, explained" by Sara Brown and "What is Machine Learning (ML)?" from the Berkeley School of Information, and view "Deep Learning Basics: Introduction and Overview" from Lex Fridman (accompanying slides available here. Finally, in reflection of today's roundtable discussion, you should add your visual connection element(s) to and from your avatar on the Miro board.
3 May 2022 / Week 4
From Machine Learning to Machine Intelligence
Algorithmic, Computational & Generative Forms
Assignment: TBA
10 May 2022 / Week 5
Guest Lecture with Prof. Mario Verdicchio, University of Bergamo (IT)
We have always lived in a post-truth era.
Deepfakes are videos created by means of machine learning techniques that allow for audiovisuals that depict people in a very realistic, almost impossible to detect yet fake way, while they say and do things that they did not say or do in reality. This has a plethora of potentially dangerous epistemological and ethical consequences. Since deepfakes are a novelty, these issues may appear to stem from the latest technologies, but this seeming attack against the truth has always been there, ever since humans started recording facts.
This lecture analyses the technological aspects of deepfakes to show that they are simply the most recent embodiment of a gap between facts and descriptions that is as old as humanity.
Assignment: TBA
17 May 2022 / Week 6
GPT Lab
Assignment: TBA
24 May 2022 / Week 7
Midterm Presentations
Assignment: TBA
31 May 2022 / Week 8
GAN Lab
Assignment: TBA
7 June 2022 / Week 9
Deepfake Lab I
Assignment: TBA
14 June 2022 / Week 10
Deepfake Lab II
Assignment: TBA
21 June 2022 / Week 11
Project Roundtable II
Assignment: TBA
28 June 2022 / Week 12
Debug Lab
Assignment: TBA
5 July 2022 / Week 13
No Class: xCoAx2022
Assignment: TBA
12 July 2022 / Week 14
Final Presentations