Artificial intelligence came another step closer to reality this weekend
after a computer came within five per cent of passing the
Turing
Test which evaluates a system's ability to demonstrate intelligence.
The Turing Test is named after mathematician
Alan
Turing whose 1950 paper
Computing
Machinery and Intelligence stated that, if enough people cannot reliably
differentiate between a human and a machine during a natural language
conversation, the machine can be considered intelligent.
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No machine has yet managed to deceive the 30 per cent of interrogators
required to pass the Turing Test.
However, at this weekend's annual
Loebner
Prize competition at the University of Reading, one system, dubbed
Elbot, managed
the most successful score yet, fooling 25 per cent of the judges.
In this year's test, five computer systems were pitted against five judges
who were each given five minutes of unrestricted conversation through a terminal
to decide which of the entities they were talking to was a human and which was a
machine.
The Loebner Prize was created by American businessman Hugh Loebner in 1990
together with the Cambridge Centre for Behavioural Studies, and is an annual
competition offering a grand prize of $100,000 (£58,000) and a solid gold medal
to the first machine to crack the Turing Test.
Although no machine has yet won the grand prize, each year $2,000 (£1,150)
and a bronze medal is awarded to the best entrant.
"Although the machines aren't yet good enough to fool all of the people all
of the time, they are certainly at the stage of fooling some of the people some
of the time," said Professor Kevin Warwick, of the School of Systems Engineering
at the University of Reading, and organiser of this year's test.
"Today's results actually show a more complex story than a straight pass or
fail by one machine. Where the machines were identified correctly by the human
interrogators as machines, the conversational abilities of each machine was
scored at 80 and 90 per cent."
Warwick believes this is a clear indication that computers are getting
increasingly good at communicating with humans in a natural and comfortable way,
slowly narrowing the divide between man and machine.
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