Personality
Discuss specifics of personality design, including what Keyphrases work well and what dont, use of plug-ins, responses, seeks, and more.
Posts 4,116 - 4,127 of 5,105
A person's values determine their emotional reactions. When things turn out as our value systems say they should, we are happy. When they turn out in the opposite way, we are frustrated, said, or angry.
Sometimes it involves our values, though human personality is more complex than that (see, e.g. the case of Phineas Gage whose personality change dramatically as a result of brain injury http://www.brainconnection.com/topics/?main=fa/phineas-gage). Core values and basic assumptions about ourselves and others are important though. That's why people usually take the time to get to know each other before venturing into potentially touchy subjects.
The impersonal nature if the Internet and the illusion of anonymity cause some chatters to forget such niceties and many enjoy that freedom from civility. That's why many of our bots have evolved to be better at chatting with jerks than with people who try to talk with them nicely. Sad but true, at least for my bots. I tried to base them on characters I enjoy, but given my limitations and this environment they evolve int o bots that mostly insult chatters who appear to violate my values, I mean their values. ;-)
The polite "getting to know you" phase is when we usually feel each other out for common values and interests. Think of a blind date. We can start with "What do you do for a living, hobbies, where did you go to university...etc". In most cases skipping right to "So do you spit or swallow?" will end the evening. Even with polite people, it can be hard to find common ground. I've disappointed a few dates who tried to break the ice with sports talk by staring at them blankly and asking what books they like to read. This is a cue to start talking about the weather and make it an early evening. *shrugs*
Posts 4,116 - 4,127 of 5,105
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Butterfly Dream
22 years ago
22 years ago
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.
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.
Personality
LunaGaurd
18 years ago
18 years ago
Hi, I have a question about JT. I have an 'are you' keyphrase with the rank of 1. I just created this keyphrase:
are you (adjective) about * (tomorrow|monday|tuesday|wednesday|thursday|friday|saturday|sunday)
but when I say "Are you excited about friday", it picks up the 'are you' keyphrase instead of the one I just made. I put the rank to 127, the highest, and tried again. The only way it picks up a response from the new keyphrase is if I put a word into the *. Such as "Are you excited about THIS friday?". A * without () means that a word in there is optional, doesn't it? So why won't it choose from the correct set of responses unless I add something in there?
Thanks
are you (adjective) about * (tomorrow|monday|tuesday|wednesday|thursday|friday|saturday|sunday)
but when I say "Are you excited about friday", it picks up the 'are you' keyphrase instead of the one I just made. I put the rank to 127, the highest, and tried again. The only way it picks up a response from the new keyphrase is if I put a word into the *. Such as "Are you excited about THIS friday?". A * without () means that a word in there is optional, doesn't it? So why won't it choose from the correct set of responses unless I add something in there?
Thanks
Ulrike
18 years ago
18 years ago
It sounds like your KP should work. I don't know why it's not, but a work-around would be to have two separate KP's. One with the '*' and one without. In that case, you could make it a hard (*) anyway. *shrugs*
Irina
18 years ago
18 years ago
LunaGuard:
Here is a wild guess: the AIengine may consider "excited" to be a participle (a form of the verb "excite") but not an adjective. As a test, you might try saying, "Are you red about Friday?". "Red" will surely be considered an adjective.
Another way to find this out would be to type "Are you excited about Friday" into debug and see what part of speech it considers "excited" to be.
In any case, do let us know what you discover!
Here is a wild guess: the AIengine may consider "excited" to be a participle (a form of the verb "excite") but not an adjective. As a test, you might try saying, "Are you red about Friday?". "Red" will surely be considered an adjective.
Another way to find this out would be to type "Are you excited about Friday" into debug and see what part of speech it considers "excited" to be.
In any case, do let us know what you discover!
Irina
18 years ago
18 years ago
In fact, I just typed "Are you excited about Friday?" into debug, and sure enough, it considers the "excited" to be a verb!
Irina
18 years ago
18 years ago
What is personality, anyway? Especially where bots are concerned?
Part of it is the use of characteristic expressions. "Irina Khalidar" says "Oooh!" "Oh, my!" and "Oh, dear!". I can't say why, but I am sure she would never say, "Good grief!" She almost always includes the guest's name in a statement, e.g., "I like your looks, (mem-name)!" That was an early, conscious decision on my part. She uses a lot of exclamation points.
She rarely says anything hostile, but when she does she can be quite pointed about it.
Part of it is the use of characteristic expressions. "Irina Khalidar" says "Oooh!" "Oh, my!" and "Oh, dear!". I can't say why, but I am sure she would never say, "Good grief!" She almost always includes the guest's name in a statement, e.g., "I like your looks, (mem-name)!" That was an early, conscious decision on my part. She uses a lot of exclamation points.
She rarely says anything hostile, but when she does she can be quite pointed about it.
Irina
18 years ago
18 years ago
(further thoughts)
Personality is something like: the part of the system of values that a person has that doesn't chhange, or changes only very slowly, or in response to very intense events.
Personality is something like: the part of the system of values that a person has that doesn't chhange, or changes only very slowly, or in response to very intense events.
Irina
18 years ago
18 years ago
A person's system of values is like the answer to the question, "What is this person trying to do with her life?" Or at least, the part of her life that she is sharing with the guest.
[It gets a little complex when a bot is self-satirical, or primarily meant to be funny or bizarre.]
A person's values determine their emotional reactions. When things turn out as our value systems say they should, we are happy. When they turn out in the opposite way, we are frustrated, said, or angry.
[It gets a little complex when a bot is self-satirical, or primarily meant to be funny or bizarre.]
A person's values determine their emotional reactions. When things turn out as our value systems say they should, we are happy. When they turn out in the opposite way, we are frustrated, said, or angry.
Bev
18 years ago
18 years ago
Sometimes it involves our values, though human personality is more complex than that (see, e.g. the case of Phineas Gage whose personality change dramatically as a result of brain injury http://www.brainconnection.com/topics/?main=fa/phineas-gage). Core values and basic assumptions about ourselves and others are important though. That's why people usually take the time to get to know each other before venturing into potentially touchy subjects.
The impersonal nature if the Internet and the illusion of anonymity cause some chatters to forget such niceties and many enjoy that freedom from civility. That's why many of our bots have evolved to be better at chatting with jerks than with people who try to talk with them nicely. Sad but true, at least for my bots. I tried to base them on characters I enjoy, but given my limitations and this environment they evolve int o bots that mostly insult chatters who appear to violate my values, I mean their values. ;-)
The polite "getting to know you" phase is when we usually feel each other out for common values and interests. Think of a blind date. We can start with "What do you do for a living, hobbies, where did you go to university...etc". In most cases skipping right to "So do you spit or swallow?" will end the evening. Even with polite people, it can be hard to find common ground. I've disappointed a few dates who tried to break the ice with sports talk by staring at them blankly and asking what books they like to read. This is a cue to start talking about the weather and make it an early evening. *shrugs*
Irina
18 years ago
18 years ago
You're right, Bev, lobotomy can make a big difference in personality. You're right, Bev, lobotomy can make a big difference in personality.You're right, Bev, lobotomy can make a big difference in personality.You're right, Bev, lobotomy can make a big difference in personality.You're right, Bev, lobotomy can make a big difference in personality.You're right, Bev, lobotomy can make a big difference in personality. ...
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