Entertainment

Citizen Capital Has Produced The First Educational Book for Children Co-written By AI

Citizen Capital today announces the launch of its AI themed children’s book, Emma on Atlantic. The book was co-written by AI, to provide young readers with a concrete example of STEM in action.

Citizen Capital is a non-profit that incubates innovative technologies with the potential to transform politics and education. The company differentiates itself by releasing open-source, copyright-free materials to the public, in aim to create a world of transparent and accessible civic-engagement.

Emma on Atlantic is about a young girl’s day out in Brooklyn with her parents. The book is an experiment in “augmented creativity”, and demonstrates that in the same way machines can augment physical labor, intelligent machines have the power to support creative works, as well.

To create the first draft, Citizen Capital trained the AI on basic grammar and cadence on the mechanics of writing using a corpus of 10,000 children’s books. Despite lacking some structure and logical sense, the AI produced a draft with working grammar, and a winding, dream-like narrative, which resonated with a child’s perspective. The team at Citizen Capital stayed true to this tone as they layered the story.

To illustrate the book, pictures of Brooklyn were taken and added to an algorithm trained on children’s book illustrations – called “Neural Style.” This was able to style the photos into final book illustrations.

The global educational technology market is expected to grow to $40.9 billion by 2022, and a large part of this increase is due to AI developments. AI algorithms and machine learning are transforming education by collecting, analyzing and correlating every interaction that takes place in the physical and virtual classroom.

However, teaching students about AI and its creative potential is an aspect of STEM learning that is often overlooked. With the launch of this AI co-written book, Citizen Capital aims to provide not only a resource for STEM education, but to introduce children into the digital process of how AI can be used for creative projects.

“AI has the ability to reveal information about the creative process to us in a way that would be impossible without it,” said Philip Bjerknes, founder of Citizen Capital. “I, for one, am very interested to see what AI can tell us about art, and I challenge readers to create their own experiments as well.”

Sam Brake Guia

Sam is an energetic and passionate writer/presenter, always looking for the next adventure. In August 2016 he donated all of his possessions to charity, quit his job, and left the UK. Since then he has been on the road travelling through North, Central and South America searching for new adventures and amazing stories.

View Comments

Recent Posts

How Coca-Cola’s AI blueprint gives modern founders a massive edge

Coca-Cola is building AI agents – and it does not mean automating the can. The…

9 hours ago

‘A digital pandemic is a plausible scenario’: ITU flagship report

The ITU digital pandemic scenario is like the sequel to Cyber Polygon -- prepping for…

5 days ago

One Way Summit returns to San Francisco with expanded format and star-studded speaker lineup 

One Way Ventures has announced the dates and lineup for the second edition of the…

6 days ago

AIM 2026 opens with Chris Schembra, Barbara Corcoran and Get Covered unpacking the apartment industry’s AI moment and more

Interest in the apartment industry is reaching fever pitch as author Chris Schembra, mogul Barbara…

1 week ago

Is LinkedIn Tracking Your Browser Activity? Here’s What’s Behind It

Let’s take a closer look at ‘Browsergate’: is LinkedIn really running the biggest corporate espionage…

2 weeks ago

Techstars Startup Weekend bets on Valencia as a next European startup launchpad

Valencia’s tech ecosystem is getting a big win this June 12-14 as Techstars Startup Weekend announces…

2 weeks ago