Variations On the Classic Turing Test
holy_calamity writes "New Scientist reports on the different flavors of Turing Test being used by AI researchers to judge the human-ness of their creations. While some strive only to meet the 'appearance Turing Test' and build or animate characters that look human, others are investigating how robots can be made to elicit the same brain activity in a person as interacting with a human would."
It really is kind of creepy how close they've come to actual life-like robotics... but my question is, how life-like should a robot really be? I mean, are we going to be replacing friends with these guys, or are they meant to serve us? Don't get me wrong, I have a great respect for these scientists, I just wonder how these sorts of real robots will fare on the market.
The Turing test is for apparent 'human' intelligence, where robotics adds communications via 'expressiveness'. These are two different vectors: rote intelligence and capacity to communicate (via body language, and the rest of linguistics/heuristics).
The article doesn't abstract the basic cognitive capacity because it entangles it with the communications medium. The Turing Test ought to be done in a confessional, where you don't get to see the device taking the test. It would also provide a feedback loop on the test as well.
---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voight-Kampff_machine
The turing test always struck me as ridiculously anthropomorphic. Clearly the existance of non-humanlike intelligence can be envisaged. But no matter how smart, it would fail this test.
Furthermore, in an in-depth conversation, surely an AI would have to lie (talk about its family, its working life, etc)...
If we continue to enshrine the standard of the Turing test, we're aiming for a generation of inherently untruthful fake-people machines. If it 'knows' that many/most things it tells us are lies, it may well have to assume the same for us. At this point, I suspect its time to drop in a skynet reference or two.
Lastly, its worth pointing out that for a 2 minute conversation, a randomly selected response of "lol" "haha" and "rofl" would match, if not out-score many people on the Turing test.