Turing test

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Information for Authority record
Name (Hebrew)
מבחן טיורינג
Name (Latin)
Turing test
Name (Arabic)
اختبار تورنغ
See Also From tracing topical name
Artificial intelligence
Machine theory
CAPTCHA (Challenge-response test)
MARC
MARC
Other Identifiers
Wikidata: Q189223
Library of congress: sh 93008808
Sources of Information
  • Work cat.: 93-9050: Crockett, L. Turing test and the frame problem, 1994.
  • Dict. artific. intel. & robotics(A test whereby an experimenter asks questions and, based on the responses, determines whether the respondent is a human or a machine.)
  • Encyc. artific. intel.
  • Artific. intel. & expert sys. sourcebk.
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Wikipedia description:

The Turing test, originally called the imitation game by Alan Turing in 1949, is a test of a machine's ability to exhibit intelligent behaviour equivalent to that of a human. In the test, a human evaluator judges a text transcript of a natural-language conversation between a human and a machine. The evaluator tries to identify the machine, and the machine passes if the evaluator cannot reliably tell them apart. The results would not depend on the machine's ability to answer questions correctly, only on how closely its answers resembled those of a human. Since the Turing test is a test of indistinguishability in performance capacity, the verbal version generalizes naturally to all of human performance capacity, verbal as well as nonverbal (robotic). The test was introduced by Turing in his 1950 paper "Computing Machinery and Intelligence" while working at the University of Manchester. It opens with the words: "I propose to consider the question, 'Can machines think?'" Because "thinking" is difficult to define, Turing chooses to "replace the question by another, which is closely related to it and is expressed in relatively unambiguous words". Turing describes the new form of the problem in terms of a three-person party game called the "imitation game", in which an interrogator asks questions of a man and a woman in another room in order to determine the correct sex of the two players. Turing's new question is: "Are there imaginable digital computers which would do well in the imitation game?" This question, Turing believed, was one that could actually be answered. In the remainder of the paper, he argued against the major objections to the proposition that "machines can think". Since Turing introduced his test, it has been highly influential in the philosophy of artificial intelligence, resulting in substantial discussion and controversy, as well as criticism from philosophers like John Searle, who argue against the test's ability to detect consciousness. Since the early 2020s, several large language models such as ChatGPT have passed modern, rigorous variants of the Turing test.

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