| Literature DB >> 27257441 |
Abstract
In this paper we look at the phenomenon that is the Turing test. We consider how Turing originally introduced his imitation game and discuss what this means in a practical scenario. Due to its popular appeal we also look into different representations of the test as indicated by numerous reviewers. The main emphasis here, however, is to consider what it actually means for a machine to pass the Turing test and what importance this has, if any. In particular does it mean that, as Turing put it, a machine can "think". Specifically we consider claims that passing the Turing test means that machines will have achieved human-like intelligence and as a consequence the singularity will be upon us in the blink of an eye.Entities:
Keywords: Chatbots; Deception detection; Machine misidentification; Natural language; Turing’s imitation game
Year: 2015 PMID: 27257441 PMCID: PMC4867147 DOI: 10.1007/s12559-015-9372-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cognit Comput ISSN: 1866-9956 Impact factor: 5.418
Fig. 1Turing’s two tests for his imitation game: Left a one-to-one; Right b one judge-two hidden interlocutors
| LHS | RHS |
|---|---|
| [11:59:14] Judge: Hello | [11:59:57] Judge: How are you doing? |
| LHS | RHS |
|---|---|
| [16:28:55] Judge: how tall are you | [16:29:04] Judge: how tall are you |
| LHS | RHS |
|---|---|
| [16:30:37] Judge: don’t you think the imitation game was best in it it’s original form? | [16:31:08] Judge: don’t you thing the imitation game was more interesting before Turing got |
| LHS | RHS |
|---|---|
| [14:49:59] Judge: Hi what’s your name? | [14:50:07] Judge: Hello where are you? |