Mitsuku Chatbot Wins Loebner Prize 2013
mikejuk writes "The final round of the 23rd annual Loebner Prize competition took place in Londonderry, Northern Ireland with four chatbots hoping to convince four judges that they were humans. Mitsuku, a chatbot that is kept busy chatting to people around the world, was awarded this year's bronze medal. Mitsuku's botmaster, Steve Worswick, used to run a music website. Once he added a chatbot he discovered more people visited to chat than for music so he concentrated all his efforts on the bot but he still regards it as a hobby. Mitsuku uses AIML (Artificial Intelligence Markup Language) and is a pandorabot, based on the free open-source-based community webservice the enables anyone who wants to, to develop and publish chatbots on the web."
http://imgs.xkcd.com/comics/turing_test.png
... and get a device that could be programmed to deal with telemarketers.
It might be amusing to see just how long one could string telemarketers along before they discover they are talking to a machine.
Along the lines of the TeleCrapper 2000, but this one might keep one on the line for quite some time with some amusing results.
A coy female voice.
Telemarketers.
I can't stop 'em, but I might get some fun out of 'em.
I asked it, "What color is your dog?" and it responded, "That would depend, as a dog can be many colours." Looks like the Turing Test passage is a ways off.
It's like talking to a complete asshole who doesn't want to talk to you, and also happens to be retarded.
Hmmm ... I usually call those a 'family reunion'.
I checked out the website for the Mitsuku chatbot and took a rather pessimistic poke at it.
Chatbot: [boilerplate noises omitted] ... "What is your name?"
Myself: "I'm the fiddler."
Chatbot: "Who made you the fiddler?" [A reasonable, albeit somewhat peculiar, response.]
Myself: "I took too long once to feed my peckish cat."
Chatbot: "Where did you take it?" [Instant FAIL.]
Myself: "I took it to new heights of frustrated noises." (Bonus straight-man response.)
Chatbot: "Where did you take it?" [Parrot-like repetition raises the chat to new heights of FAIL.]
As always, two lines were enough to trip it up. The third line was a bonus that only amplified its shortcomings. I'll admit to cheating a little by using a couple of words ("peckish", "frustrated") that might have required contextual glossing by less educated individuals, but those words were still relatively common. All known chatbots seem to rely on fairly simple-minded word triggers, and even a minor requirement for context sensitivity is enough to make them fall flat on their nonexistent faces. Anyone possessing even remote familiarity with efforts at artificial intelligence knows this, of course, but hope springs eternal.
(Notes for the lazy: The word "peckish" is a common slang term for "hungry", and http://www.mitsuku.com/ is the website for the chatbot in question.)
A truly excellent pizza parlor is a delight unto the heavens. Treasure the sauce and the toppings!
As I may have mentioned in years past, I don't think judging AI or chatbots by how "human" they are is very useful.
For instance, one of the questions mentioned in the article was "Why am I tired after a long sleep?" A bot that wasn't trying to pretend to be a human could say "I have no need for sleep, but maybe your cache expired." Or make a crack about 'puny humans.'
I studied some of the software that prize winners have shared and found it very interesting, but the questions people actually ask are more valuable to me as a botmaker. If the humans looked beyond this artificial limit, while designing (and using) this technology, very interesting interactions can take place. I'd like to see Loebner redefine the parameters. perhaps categories.
Best performance as a taxi driver.
Best bot for making you think.
Best for getting answers to homework questions.
Bot most likely to take over the world.
There's already plenty of humans.
Fifty years of Yippie! 1968-2018
Except those are just a series of unrelated questions. Previous chatbot contests have required carrying on a believable conversation and responding naturally to non-interrogative statements. This just looks like Jeopardy with a little simulated opinion thrown in.
I am becoming gerund, destroyer of verbs.