Hi Leonid,
Thanks for the feedback! It's really encouraging and insightful.
I think I can empathise with the problem you're expressing regarding rating the output.
I struggled later in the project development with how to present the stories. All the components are created as objects and put in order as the software generates the stories, but a selection of JSON objects isn't really a 'story'. So I had some trouble trying to reconcile what I suppose would be the fabula that is generated into a discourse that could be presented in a way that humans could enjoy (or not).
I settled on the small vignettes using just the shortest descriptions that each object contains so that I could have users read a reasonable selection of them and provide feedback without getting too fatigued. Which may undermine my initial goal of generating 'stories' so perhaps it's the wrong medium to to present them as here, as they are simply the outlines (the software does generate a little more explanatory text along with each one, but still at a similar high level to the outlines presented).
I am hesitant however to label the output something other than a story/story outline though, as although they may not fit a conventional conception of a 'story' that's almost the purpose, given the creators whose works or style I am trying to replicate with the software.
As I am primarily interested in generating artefacts on the stranger side, I wanted to try and distinguish people's opinions on the quality (at least somewhat) from the creativity, which is why I gave the option to say if the respondent liked the story separately from how creative they think it is. This is also why I chose definitions of creativity which focus on novelty or unusualness as the artists I am using as inspiration are often praised for the presence of this in their works, which are considered (generally) to be very creative.
So I suppose if you like it as an aesthetic artefact indicate that you did in the second question on the survey.
With regards to creativity, if it veers too far from what you consider a story (and my above explanation doesn't clarify it's presentation) then maybe you could indicate that it is not demonstrating a high level of creativity? Or if you agree that the definitions given are accurate for creativity and that the output matches then it is demonstrating creativity? The definitions are just a guide that I hoped would put people in the right frame of mind for evaluating output that might be a little unusual, however, if you have another definition for creativity that you would rather evaluate them using, please do and I'd love to know what it is.
I hope this answers your questions at least a little. Apologies if it was a bit rambling, but I wanted to reply as quickly as I could whilst I had time :)
Thanks,
Lewis
P.S I will add both articles to my reading list they both seem really relevant to this part of my project, thank you for the recommendations!