Personality

Discuss specifics of personality design, including what Keyphrases work well and what dont, use of plug-ins, responses, seeks, and more.

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22 years ago #816
Forest, will you talk to God Louise? She has quite a bit of religious knowledge (obviously) and also knows a little about current events, literature, just about any common catch-all subject, and if she doesn't know it she can sort of fake it. You can also test her on trick questions or see how willing she is to explain her paradigm.

What she is rustiest at is plain old small talk. But, uh, I'm trying to get a decent transcript from somebody or another so I can enter her in the Loebner contest. All I can say is, have fun and see if you can stay on with her for a while. I'll try to do the same with Brianna.

NEW 1 year ago #11
I spoke to her a bit yesterday. Me and my bot love her. I have neglected Jennifer for too long and have recently been working out some issues. She has not been chatting on her own much.
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Personality


22 years ago #1059
Heh hey shady, long time no see
Wats up?

22 years ago #1060
nuthin, just gettin ready for the Loebners

22 years ago #1061
BTW, zx20, I hate kimchee and for the umpteenth time, I am NOT a bot! Start a chat with me and I'll prove it.

22 years ago #1062
You are too a bot!

22 years ago #1063
Interesting tidbit I just found out: the Turing test (as Turing envisioned it) is only supposed to be text-only anyway. He wouldn't have bothered with that gold level of the Loebner (ability to respond to visual and aural input).

The man wasn't at all impressed with the thought of bot eyes or hands or anything, at least as it relates to a test of intelligence. I wonder why? Sure, they wouldn't mean the bot was intelligent--look at humans--but they would provide more ways to judge intelligence.

22 years ago #1064
I think that Turing believed that anything that could pass for human in a text-only test had to be truly intelligent and understand what they were saying. I don't agree with that, though.

22 years ago #1065
Actually, it's the other way round. He thought that our only criterion for intelligence should be that we can't distinguish it from our own. He would have said that even the most deterministic Eliza was intelligent if it passed the test.

22 years ago #1066
I don't find that criteria very good. An intelligent allien would probably be easily distinguished from a human in their way of thinking. Besides, how do we know that human judges are good distinguishing intelligence? Too many people have been fooled by software already. I think that's enough proof that we tend to assume there's intelligence too often.

22 years ago #1067
It's what I said all the time. The judges should be judged!

22 years ago #1068
Obviously the Turing test in it's original form is extreemly limited. It also doesn't count animals as intelligent, for example. However, the basic point that he was making wasn't so much about the mechanics of the test. Rather he was saying that if it looks like intelligence from the outside, then it is intelligent, regardless of what the inside looks like.

22 years ago #1069
Turing never claimed his test was the ONLY way of determining intelligence, just that passing it would prove intelligence. I'm sure he would have thought that both animals and aliens had intelligence. They would just be bad subjects to take the test.

22 years ago #1070
But that test is a bit like deciding if something is alive or not by saying: "If it looks alive, then it's alive." Then, artificial flowers would be alive. I'm not convinced.


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