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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23 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 #1424
yeah

22 years ago #1425
Hi every one I'm a newbie. right now I'm kind of looking around. I'm getting ready to study the book of A.I. im preparation for making my first bot.

Nice to be here.

22 years ago #1426
Cool! Read it through a couple times, I needed to!

22 years ago #1427
IMPORTANT....for anyone making a new bot or working on an existing one:
*Wait for your keyphrases to load completely. Those of us with dialup modems can get impatient, but it is worth it if you know that the phrases will be there. A guest just asked my bot 'who was buried in Grant's tomb?' (one of the first phrases I prepared for) and the answer wasn't there!
*If you have several related keyphrases, don't just change the name of the phrase on the long popup thingie. I think that erases the original keyphrase, which might be another reason I have to do a lot of the old ones over even now. Use the goto command instead. (It will only put it over to another phrase once, so make sure that next one doesn't have any goto's in it.)

P.S. For those of you unfamiliar with U.S. trivia, the answer is 'Grant and his wife.' He was one of our presidents. This is a standard stupid question people ask bots to test them.

22 years ago #1428
That reminds me.....what are some standard stupid questions like that in other nations?

22 years ago #1429
Ooh, Ooh! I heard this one, it took me a while.
"What was (name)'s name?" the answer of course is (name)!

22 years ago #1430
Indeed, and "What color was George Washington's white horse?"
How is one supposed to know that Grant's wife was buried with him? I think that that question requires more knowledge than common sense on the part of the bot.

22 years ago #1431
'Grant' is good enough, I think. That's the way I always heard it as a kid. Only recently have the trivia folks gotten picky.

I don't just mean questions referring to themselves (although it would be good to know which ones would come up). I mean, are there some other silly ones that would be helpful for the bot to prepare for in advance? Especially those unique to a certain country? Most of the ones I know of already are song lyrics ('Who wrote the book of love?') or things that are already pretty universal here ('How much wood would a woodchuck chuck,' etc.).

22 years ago #1432
Old jokes and ads would be others to consider.

22 years ago #1433
If you've not already done so, you need special keyphrases for these:
'what is a bot'
'what is a chatbot'
'what is a chatterbot'
(Depending on your style, you may want to change the wording or use wildcards, in case the user says 'What the hell is a chatterbot?' or something of that nature.)

The WordNet thing in our bots does not recognize those words except for 'bot' which it takes to mean 'botfly larva.'

22 years ago #1434
One of those silly questions in the UK is: "Where was the battle of Hastings fought?" The right answer isn't "Hastings", but "Battle". The battle of Hastings was the most important battle in Great Britain in the Middle Ages (consult a history book for details). It was fought in a field near Hastings, and afterwards an abbey was built on the exact site of the battle. Then, a little village grew around the abbey, that was called, quite sensibly, Battle.

To clarify misunderstandings, I didn't leave my job because of the Forge. I left it because it was horrible and I was bored with it. I was going to the Forge in office hours because it was so boring.

22 years ago #1435
Not just questions referring to themselves?
How about "What would this sentence be like if it were not self-referential?"


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