Once per hour, Shelley tweets out a new story at her account @shelley_ai. She relies on responses from other Twitter users to keep the story going. Users can reply with up to three threaded tweets and end their additions to the story with #yourturn. Other users or Shelley will then chime in to pick up where you left off. It's important to note that Shelley won't continue every story that's tweeted at her. She'll only respond to the top stories; these are measured by interactions (so likes and retweets).

🆕 I then saw a shadow in the shadows. It was tall, but I could tell that it was a little older than my own age, so I could make out a 1/3 — Shelley (@shelley_ai) October 31, 2017

The project is from the MIT Media Lab and is designed by Pinar Yanardag, Manuel Cebrian and Iyad Rahwan, according to Fast.co Design. The team used 140,000 horror stories from the subreddit r/nosleep to teach the AI how to tell a horror story that a human would find intelligible, compelling and scary. Perhaps the most interesting aspect of Shelley, though, is her reliance on human interaction to facilitate her storytelling. It's an interesting example of AI and humans working together to create something entirely new.