Has anyone here ever tried an actual Turing Test?
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I'm not sure what you're asking, but I'll attempt three different answers.I'll take it that's a no for most. Do you think you would do well with such a test?
Do you think you would do well with such a test?
Do you mean "Would I do well at writing software that would fool the interrogator in a Turing Test?", or "Would I be able to persuade the interrogator in a Turing Test that I was the human?"
3) Could I discern a bot? Well, I dunno. It's quite possible I've already been fooled. And, by definition, I just wouldn't know. If I were part of a research team, I might just become un-foolable ... until the technology surpasses my training.
Have I participated in some variant of what I've described? Not knowingly.
Didn't the original Turing test specify some sort of inability to see the entity with which one was conversing? I think that goes to what you're saying.No. Many people do seem skeptical that they could actually distinguish a conscious being from a well-designed machine. I'm not surprised. I've long thought that when we identify a person, what we're really doing is looking for something similar to ourself - not for some abstract definition of consciousness.
Has anyone here ever tried an actual Turing Test?
Didn't the original Turing test specify some sort of inability to see the entity with which one was conversing? I think that goes to what you're saying.
So I wonder about the Turing test. Is it really a test of the AI, or is it a test of the designer's intelligence?
The Turing test is a measure of how successful the designer has been at designing an artificial system with intelligent behavior. The idea is that if humans are intelligent, and the system behaves so much like humans that an interrogator can't tell them apart, then the system is also behaving intelligently. It's not a perfect test, but it's one good test to use.
Thats me administering the Turing test.I had this 3rd option in mind.
Thats me administering the Turing test.
The "AI" is the entity 'taking' the test and being evaluated in terms of 'doing well' etc.
The Turing Test is meant as a challenge for the proposed AI. So when you ask if I would "do well", it doesnt really make sense.Sorry. The thread went cold for awhile so I've lost my train of thought. What point are you trying to make?
Great question about, that subject. I also have an interest in, that subject. I would like the talk about, that subject.Has anyone here ever tried an actual Turing Test?
The Turing Test is meant as a challenge for the proposed AI. So when you ask if I would "do well", it doesnt really make sense.
The idea is, I think, that the Turing test administrator just has to be anyone we recognize as having "normal" intelligence. That's where the bar should be set to call machine success "intelligent".I think it's relevant. Does the AI pass the test if I fail to detect it is an AI but you succeed?
My position would be you're not just testing the AI. You're testing the intelligence of the tester and the creator as well. If the purpose is to uncover AI, how do you control for those factors?
Its really about that designation, what we can call intelligent, and not too much more.
Hmm. Maybe. I mean, I dont think the Turing test was proposed as the one and only way to assign intelligence.... but just one sure way.I could agree with that, and such corresponds with my position that a discussion about "intelligence" is really a discussion about "things like us", not an independent abstract construct.