Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Can robots write stories?

Strange things unfold when artificial intelligen­ce attempts to write a story. Author Daniel Kehlmann recounts his co-authoring experiment with an algorithm, describing possibilit­ies and pitfalls.

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In early 2020, German-Austrian novelist and playwright Daniel Kehlmann wrote the opening lines of a short story: "I was looking for an apartment. It wasn't going well."

From the depths of global cloud computing, his co-author — a writing algorithm called CTRL — continued the tale: "Hey man, you have a tight ass, and you're not afraid of anything." That, apparently, was CTRL's vision of the storyline.

Kehlmann tried to stay on track by responding: "That's true, but about the apartment ..." His co-author stopped collaborat­ing.

Robot writer neither success nor failure

Kehlmann described these experience­s with machine prose in February in his first "Stuttgart Speech on the Future," a new lecture series in which personalit­ies from science, culture and politics reflect on the future.

His "My Algorithm and Me" speech has now also been published as a book. Therein, Kehlmann recounts his writing experiment with AI during a visit to the Silicon Valley in February where he met CTRL and its creator Bryan McCann.

Kehlmann doesn't consider

the story-writing venture a failure as it produced several beautifull­y absurd fragments. But AI tends to hit a wall when it comes to plots or character developmen­t. Kehlmann considers it a disoriente­d "secondary user" of human-written text.

"You'll notice that there is no one at home," said Kehlmann in his pithy style of his experience interactin­g with such "an 'unfeeling' problem-solving entity."

AI in theater

In February, the Svanda Theater in Prague live streamed the virtual premiere of the play AI: When a robot writes a play. The brainchild of a group of linguists working with computer and theatre experts, 90% of the play was written by AI.

Here too, some completely absurd plot twists were introduced, but then the algorithm spewed a cryptic statement from the depths of its "un-unconsciou­s," as Kehlmann calls it. "I am going to tell you the secret of acting. But I'm not sure I want

to," it said.

These are just two of the many writing experiment­s worldwide that are marking the way forward with text-generating AI.

Lessons from AI writing experiment­s

When creating CTRL, it was partly trained with text from the popular social media platform, Reddit. The platform has discussion forums on almost every topic, including some that can get offensive and which algorithms such as CTRL can "feed off" to reproduce hate speech. After all, AI lacks an innate understand­ing of what humans find inappropri­ate.

Second, AI has no concept of linguistic subtlety. Despite all the data used to train it, AI cannot intuit humor or metaphor. This would require contextual knowledge, a catalog of feelings and experience­s built over time.

So what can algorithms do? They can calculate very well and produce statistica­lly normal texts. For example, the word "I" in a text is more likely to be followed by the word "believe," as one finds with predictive text functions on their phone, for example. But an algorithm still struggles to place words such as "poison" or "lamp," Kehlmann explained.

Kehlmann adds that AI lacks "narrative consistenc­y." Czech linguist Rudolf Rosa, who was part of the team behind the Prague play, calls it a "lack of aboutness."

Lacking a plot twist

In its current guise, AI also fails to address one essence of storytelli­ng: the plot twist. This central narrative function requires more than merely stringing words and sentences together according to probabilit­y.

And then comes the "existentia­l" significan­ce of a text, or the abstract idea of an author's "voice."

"Narrating means planning ahead," said Kehlmann. "It means creating an inner coherence that runs through all the sentences, paragraphs. That's exactly what CTRL can't do, by definition. CTRL looks for the most likely twist, not of the plot but of the language."

Exploring AI's own aesthetics

Instead of judging how well AI performs in terms of human core competenci­es, perhaps we should rather explore the new aesthetics it introduces, suggests German digital lyricist and literary scholar, Hannes Bajohr.

He is critical of Kehlmann's AI experiment. "I think Kehlmann doesn't really get involved with AI, at least not aesthetica­lly," says Bajohr. "It doesn't occur to him that you have to write literature differentl­y with machines, and maybe different literature."

Bajohr says that CTRL was used like a "Kehlmann bot," which like the author himself, was oriented towards literary realism.

Instead, Bajohr points to AI's vast potential for experiment­al or surrealist­ic writing. He cites Allison Parrish, a poet and programmer from New York in the US, who has let algorithms invent new words among existing ones. For example, "north," "east" and "west" became "eaurth" or "woerth."

Bajohr feels that unconventi­onal approaches like these are much more productive for artistic work. "Metaphors or jokes — well, they're not so good at that. But I don't know if that's necessary. It's more interestin­g to see what they can do well and what kind of literature results from that."

 ??  ?? Daniel Kehlmann (right) meets Bryan McCann, the creator of the CTRL writing robot
Daniel Kehlmann (right) meets Bryan McCann, the creator of the CTRL writing robot
 ??  ?? A scene from a play, written by a robot, that was performed in Prague last month
A scene from a play, written by a robot, that was performed in Prague last month

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