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 2,436 - 2,447 of 7,766
Posts 2,436 - 2,447 of 7,766
leetaxx0r
21 years ago
21 years ago
Only if you disable that part of preprocessing... I would actually keep the spell check, I find it useful, but like hemi said, it can mangle a lot of sentances.
Another suggestion I have is to make emotional domains... each domain would have it's own set of keyphrases(and xkeyphrases) and it would check for keyphrases in the current domain before moving on to the the next one(the main one, though nesting them would be even cooler).
Then, for example you could have a domain named "pissed" that gets set after the person says something mean, then you can set up the pissed domain so that unless they say something nice and/or apologize, they basicly ignore the person.
Professor, is there some way I could help make new features for PF? I've got way too much time on my hands right now...lol
Another suggestion I have is to make emotional domains... each domain would have it's own set of keyphrases(and xkeyphrases) and it would check for keyphrases in the current domain before moving on to the the next one(the main one, though nesting them would be even cooler).
Then, for example you could have a domain named "pissed" that gets set after the person says something mean, then you can set up the pissed domain so that unless they say something nice and/or apologize, they basicly ignore the person.
Professor, is there some way I could help make new features for PF? I've got way too much time on my hands right now...lol
deleted
21 years ago
21 years ago
That actually sounds like a good idea. But i still agree that Spell Check should be scrapped. People just need to be more careful with their typing.
lunar22
21 years ago
21 years ago
...but it means that especially humans might get bored by xnones... deleting spellcheck that is...
Shadyman
21 years ago
21 years ago
yeah, cause the less speel checking (
), the less chance of actually hitting a keyphrase

lygn88
21 years ago
21 years ago
I say we try it, we can always go back. But sometimes you want your bot to sound a little uneducated...bad at grammer and english...how do you do that when the sight corrects spelling?
Boni
21 years ago
21 years ago
It works well for my bot because she is supposed to be a 5 year old so some of her words are intentionally misspelled. (OK so I have bad spelling too, not just Ruby so I am appreciating the spell check) I have avoided misspelling ones that would be important keywords but for long words like America (Merika) I have had her say them the way a 5 year old would. So far I haven't seen a huge problem with her language doing pickups.
Hemi
21 years ago
21 years ago
leetaxx0r, your emotional domain idea sounds cool, it would be cool to have your bot in a certain state of mind and respond differently. But that is extra work for the Professor. Unless he lets you work on his site and I think that is very unlikely.
lunar22, from my experience and probably yours too, spellcheck does more harm than good. But it would be very useful if it was improved a lot. But for now, my bot would be more intelligent without it.
lunar22, from my experience and probably yours too, spellcheck does more harm than good. But it would be very useful if it was improved a lot. But for now, my bot would be more intelligent without it.
Hemi
21 years ago
21 years ago
My main point was just that pre-processing scrambles things up a lot when the raw phrase was fine to start with.
Eugene Meltzner
21 years ago
21 years ago
I think preprocessing is at the heart of good AI. It just needs to be improved.
The Professor
21 years ago
21 years ago
Wow, backlash against the preprocessing! You're focusing on the times it fails, but it's making a huge positive difference, too. It's a basic human trait- if a bot somehow intuitively understands what you mean and responds appropriately, though he must fill in blanks and voice unspoken words, a person could go entirely without noticing. But failure is easy to spot. If you'd seen the mess before preprocessing, you'd be glad of it. And certainly it's not in its present state to stay. The ultimate goal is complete understanding of a sentence- its structure, meaning, and context. And I plan to continue in that direction.
Leetaxx0r- you're right on. That "emotional domain" is part of the AI Scripting upgrade that is my next project, which I'll be working on this month. Also, I'll be blowing memory wide open, with the ability to create memories of any type: (mem-nickname), (mem-favoritemovie), (mem-catsname). The special Keywords xmem-youare, xmem-iam, etc will be replaced with a single new one: xmemory (the old will still be made to work). Sex-based responses, also, and date & time-based responses will be part of this upgrade.
Leetaxx0r- you're right on. That "emotional domain" is part of the AI Scripting upgrade that is my next project, which I'll be working on this month. Also, I'll be blowing memory wide open, with the ability to create memories of any type: (mem-nickname), (mem-favoritemovie), (mem-catsname). The special Keywords xmem-youare, xmem-iam, etc will be replaced with a single new one: xmemory (the old will still be made to work). Sex-based responses, also, and date & time-based responses will be part of this upgrade.
Eugene Meltzner
21 years ago
21 years ago
Exactly my point. Complete and accurate sentence parsing is what it will take before we have computer programs that can carry on a conversation in English, like, say, the computer on Star Trek. We are light years from that point, but the only way to get there, assuming it is even possible, is to keep working at it.
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