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- From: Bob_Hearn@qm.claris.com (Robert Hearn)
- Newsgroups: comp.ai
- Subject: Re: Computer writes a book?
- Message-ID: <Bob_Hearn-270193135122@192.35.50.165>
- Date: 27 Jan 93 22:05:02 GMT
- References: <1993Jan25.163029.1901@seas.smu.edu> <74AXBPTT@cc.swarthmore.edu>
- Sender: news@claris.com
- Followup-To: comp.ai,rec.arts.books,misc.writing,rec.arts.int-fiction
- Organization: Spartacus Software
- Lines: 62
- Nntp-Posting-Host: hearn
-
- In article <74AXBPTT@cc.swarthmore.edu>, behrens@cc.swarthmore.edu (Eric
- Behrens) wrote:
- >
- > In article <1993Jan25.163029.1901@seas.smu.edu>, pedersen@seas.smu.edu (Ted
- > Pedersen) writes:
- > >
- > >
- > > I saw the following in the Books column (by Olin Chism) of the Dallas
- > > Morning News Sunday January 24, 1993. Copied without permission. It
- > > concerns a computer program that allegedly wrote a book in the style
- > > of Jacqueline Susann.
- > >
- > >
- >
-
- I remember hearing about this a while back, and I think I heard it as
- factual. It's certainly not impossible; there are two questions which
- must be asked of any computer composition, however. The first is,
- how much editing is the meta-author allowed to do? This can range from
- correcting simple grammatical mistakes to culling the best parts and
- putting them together. That is, generate a lot of grammatical nonsense,
- and pick the parts that are good and stick them together.
- The second question is, what is the potential range of material
- generated? If you run the program again, do you get the same novel, or
- one with an Identical plot but different characters, or a totally
- different novel that is still in the style of Jacqueline Susann?
-
- If you can run the program and without fail get a new, totally
- different, Jacqueline Susann novel every time, you've really got
- something. I think this is a long way off. If you spend months poring
- over output for the right pieces and string them all together so it
- makes sense, you don't have much.
-
- My guess is that Scott French has something in between, and the
- specific answers to my two questions would be needed to characterize
- how much of an achievement it is.
-
- BTW, I wrote a program while in college that would take an initial
- state defined by a set of characters, attributes, and goals, and tell
- the story of the characters attempting to resolve their goals. It was
- based on Jim Meehan's Tale Spin program. My favorite story was the one
- I got when I gave a character a state it didn't know anything about.
- It was unable to resolve any goals. It goes like this:
-
- "Once upon a time there was a bear named Jack. Jack was dead. Jack
- was still dead. The end."
-
-
- >
- > But you never know. I recall an NPR report perhaps two years ago. It was
- > about a computer scientist who had spent a decade creating a program which
- > could compose in the style of Bach.
- >
-
- I would be very interested in hearing more about this program from anyone.
- I've always wanted to try something like that.
-
-
- Bob Hearn
- Spartacus Software
-
- Opinions expressed here are those of my empolyer, since that's me.
-