Hey, is there a way to make the AI not to mix up different character attributes? What I mean is, say I am trying to get characters from a show, but not ones it seems to know, but also make changes to them. I write ""First Characters Name" has "Attribute 1". "First Characters Name" has "Attribute 2". "Second Characters Name" has "Attribute 3"." and then a lot of the time it creates 2 characters, one with "Attribute 1" and "Attribute 3" and the other with "Attribute 2" (this is simplified, I am trying more than 3 attributes).
EDIT: Sorry, new here, only really used the image generator so far, so that's what I'm talking about.
If you're asking if the AI understands persistent narrative threads across characters in a chat, nope. You can do some tricks like write entries in the lore file of the main AI character you are talking to that remind it about the guest characters in the session, but the AI will tend to favor the main AI character in all things.
It's possible to get characters to act very differently, but not without a lot of work. All the guest AI NPCs invited will slowly morph into the main character. This tool is just not quite ready for any kind of narrative depth. It's challenging enough to get something solid with one AI.
The AI has improved in its ability to create two different entities with unique attributes, though the tendency will still be to merge them. If you tell the image model a name, say, Samantha, it will use training data about Samanthas to influence the outcome. It doesn't matter if you are declaring Samantha to be this or that.
The best you can hope for is something like:
A casual photo of two different people. One is a woman with dark brown hair, aged 25, wearing a white jumpsuit and laughing. The other person is a man, aged 27, who is wearing a red jumpsuit, but he looks very upset.
You'll notice that it mixes the two characters up, because it doesn't understand the human understanding of these values. One thing I've noticed is that putting a lot of gender pronouns in a prompt increases the "gendery-ness" of a render. Just putting "she" and "her" several times increases the chances you'll get two females, even if you only describe one. The AI doesn't remember things in any coherent sense.