Since the campaign began many have stopped parking their cars illegally on city streets as they normally do
being independently verified and featuring questions asked randomly.
The experiments used five supercomputers -- machines that run massive numbers of processors to make high-speed calculations. The questions were answered by a mixture of real people and computers, after which the human judges had to decide who was human and who was not. The computer programme simulating a 13-year-old boy named Eugene Goostman persuaded the judges 33 percent of the time that it was a human. The Russian creator of "Eugene", US-based scientist Vladimir Veselov, said they had spent a lot of time developing a character with a believable personality and this year we improved the 'dialog controller' which makes the conversation far more human-like when compared to programs that just answer questions. They plan to make Eugene smarter and improving his conversation logic.
The test was established in 1950 by Alan Turing, a World War II British codebreaker and pioneer of computer science, in an academic journal article about whether computers "think". Turing, who played a major role in breaking the "Enigma" code used by Nazi Germany, is often hailed as a genius who laid the groundwork for modern computing. But he ended his life in sadness, committing suicide in 1954 at the age of 41, two years after being convicted of the then crime of homosexuality. He was awarded a posthumous pardon by Queen Elizabeth II in December 2013 following a long campaign by supporters.
Since the campaign began many have stopped parking their cars illegally on city streets as they normally do
being independently verified and featuring questions asked randomly.
The experiments used five supercomputers -- machines that run massive numbers of processors to make high-speed calculations. The questions were answered by a mixture of real people and computers, after which the human judges had to decide who was human and who was not. The computer programme simulating a 13-year-old boy named Eugene Goostman persuaded the judges 33 percent of the time that it was a human. The Russian creator of "Eugene", US-based scientist Vladimir Veselov, said they had spent a lot of time developing a character with a believable personality and this year we improved the 'dialog controller' which makes the conversation far more human-like when compared to programs that just answer questions. They plan to make Eugene smarter and improving his conversation logic.
The test was established in 1950 by Alan Turing, a World War II British codebreaker and pioneer of computer science, in an academic journal article about whether computers "think". Turing, who played a major role in breaking the "Enigma" code used by Nazi Germany, is often hailed as a genius who laid the groundwork for modern computing. But he ended his life in sadness, committing suicide in 1954 at the age of 41, two years after being convicted of the then crime of homosexuality. He was awarded a posthumous pardon by Queen Elizabeth II in December 2013 following a long campaign by supporters.
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