![]() ![]() ![]() The psychiatrists were fooled 48 percent of the time – impressive!įast forward to 2014 – Eugene Goostman, a computer program that simulated a 13-year-old boy from Ukraine, made headlines claiming to have passed the Turing test. During the Turing test, two groups of psychiatrists analyzed conversation transcripts of both actual patients and computers running PARRY. In 1972, PARRY, a chatbot modeling the behavior of a paranoid schizophrenic, used a similar approach to that of ELIZA. However, ELIZA was an easy target if trying to intentionally ask questions that are likely to make a computer slip up. That’s why ELIZA could fool some humans and claimed to be one of the programs to pass the Turing test. If ELIZA couldn’t find a keyword in a user’s text, it would provide a “non-directional” response containing a keyword earlier in the conversation. Its script pretended to be a Rogerian psychotherapist that gave “non-directional” responses. In 1966, Joseph Weizenbaum (computer scientist and MIT professor) created ELIZA, a program that looked for specific keywords in typed comments to transform them into sentences. ![]() Join the Partisia Blockchain Hackathon, design the future, gain new skills, and win! ![]()
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