![]() ![]() The first involves three people, the interrogator, a man and a woman. In Turing’s paper, he gives two versions of the test. Instead he called it the imitation game, since the goal was to imitate a human. Naturally Turing didn’t call his test “the Turing test”. The young age excused much of the strangeness in its conversation. In one example, to give the machine an advantage, the test was to tell if it was a machine or a 13-year-old Ukrainian boy. Often the test is done with a number of interrogators and the measure of success is the percentage of interrogators who can’t tell. If he can’t tell then the machine passes the Turing test. The purpose of the interrogator’s questions are to help him to decide if he’s talking to a machine or a human. The interrogator asks questions of the machine using only keyboard and screen. It involves an interrogator and a machine with the machine hidden from the interrogator. The Turing test as we know it today is to see if a machine can fool someone into thinking that it’s a human. The Imitation Game Turing test with machine Though as you’ll see below, Turing’s test wasn’t even for intelligence or even for thinking, but rather to determine a test subject’s sex. These all fit the definition of AI as a machine that can perform a task normally requiring the intelligence of a human. ![]() Today we’re more interested in machines that can intelligently make restaurant recommendations, drive our car along the tedious highway to and from work, or identify the surprising looking flower we just stumbled upon. The Turing test was first introduced in 1950, often cited as year-one for AI research. But does it pass the Turing test? Or does the Turing test matter anymore? IBM has come up with an automatic debating system called Project Debater that researches a topic, presents an argument, listens to a human rebuttal and formulates its own rebuttal.
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