The AI Engine
This forum is for discussion of how The Personality Forge's AI Engine works. This is the place for questions on what means what, how to script, and ideas and plans for the Engine.
Posts 1,648 - 1,659 of 7,766
Posts 1,648 - 1,659 of 7,766
Bedawyn
22 years ago
22 years ago
Okay, new question! My bot has been -- quite uncharacteristically -- greeting guest chatters by calling them "friend". I thought at first that it must be simply plugging in "friend" when it didn't have a (name) to access, and I "fixed" it by taking (name) out of the xhello responses. But I'm going through the transcripts now, and it _is_ using Guest instead of name, the way I expected. So now I'm confused about where the "friend" is coming from. Help?!? My bot likes being antisocial! (Oh, and _that_ subject.... both my bots seem to decide they like people rather easily, with little provocation. How do they decide whether they like someone or not, if they haven't talked long enough to invoke any of the emotion-ranked keyphrases?)
Shadyman
22 years ago
22 years ago
The bots use "friend" for the (name) plugin when talking to guests. If chatting to a member, they say the member's name.
Ex "Hi friend" if I wasn't logged in, or "Hi Shadyman" if I was logged in
Ex "Hi friend" if I wasn't logged in, or "Hi Shadyman" if I was logged in
Eugene Meltzner
22 years ago
22 years ago
The beginning of the conversation is the first line, no matter who says it.
Bedawyn
22 years ago
22 years ago
Okay, thanks. Then where does the Guest come in? (As in, where the transcript says "Hello, Guest")
Shadyman
22 years ago
22 years ago
I think that "Guest" is used mostly in non-contest times, "friend" is used to suck up to the judges
Bedawyn
22 years ago
22 years ago
Ah, of course. Sucking up... now that's an explanation I should have anticipated. *g*
Corwin
22 years ago
22 years ago
Bedawyn, I know what you mean with (subj) plug-in being misused. I think The Professor was trying to get a short subject plug-in happening at one stage which would only use the one noun or verb phrase immediately following keyphrases, but it's hard to get going.
As far as the reverse plug-in idea, I think it would take a significant amount of recoding that would seriously delay response time. At the moment, the responding bot only deals with the words it has been given. It doesn't know that the speaking bot has used a plug-in in a sentence.
As far as the reverse plug-in idea, I think it would take a significant amount of recoding that would seriously delay response time. At the moment, the responding bot only deals with the words it has been given. It doesn't know that the speaking bot has used a plug-in in a sentence.
Turing's Dad
22 years ago
22 years ago
Well, the idea would be not to have the bots simply recognise if another bot is using a plug-in, but to see if a word is of a specific type. Thus, you could have the keyphrase
Do you like [foodType]?
== I don't eat, sorry.
Which would be called if the human said "Do you like pastrami?" or something like that.
Do you like [foodType]?
== I don't eat, sorry.
Which would be called if the human said "Do you like pastrami?" or something like that.
Eugene Meltzner
22 years ago
22 years ago
Right, but that would require a huge amount of preprocessing. Remember when chats were going at snail speed?
Turing's Dad
22 years ago
22 years ago
Very true.
Question. Isn't "a (plug-in)" supposed to turn into "an (plug-in)" if the plug-in starts with a vowel? My bot was supposed to give "a (color) (animal)" and he gave "a aqua wombat." I seem to remember that a was supposed to turn into an.
Question. Isn't "a (plug-in)" supposed to turn into "an (plug-in)" if the plug-in starts with a vowel? My bot was supposed to give "a (color) (animal)" and he gave "a aqua wombat." I seem to remember that a was supposed to turn into an.
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