Abstract. This paper considers undecidability in the imitation game, the so-called Turing Test. In the Turing Test, a human, a machine, and an interrogator are the players of the game. In our model of the Turing Test, the machine and the interrogator are formalized as Turing machines, allowing us to derive several impossibility results concerning the capabilities of the interrogator. The key issue is that the validity of the Turing test is not attributed to the capability of human or machine, but rather to the capability of the interrogator. In particular, it is shown that no Turing machine can be a perfect interrogator. We also discuss meta-imitation game and imitation game with analog interfaces where both the imitator and the interrogato...
In his 1950 paper “Computing Machinery and Intelligence,” Alan Turing proposed that we can determine...
The Turing test is perhaps the most famous, most quoted, and probably most often misrepresented and ...
In this paper we consider transcripts which originated from a practical series of Turing’s Imitation...
Laplace, Turing and the "imitation game" impossible geometry : randomness, determinism and programs ...
International audienceFrom the physico-mathematical view point, the imitation game between man and m...
Giuseppe Longo. Laplace, Turing and the "imitation game" impossible geometry: randomness, determini...
Abstract: From the physico-mathematical view point, the imitation game between man and machine, prop...
Comparative tests work by finding the difference (or the absence of difference) between a reference ...
This issue of the Kybernetes journal is concerned with the philosophical question- Can a Machine Thi...
ABSTRACT. We show that the problem of whether two Turing Machines are functionally equivalent is und...
Gorman B, Thurau C, Bauckhage C, Humphrys M. Believability testing and Bayesian imitation in interac...
Can machines think? I present a study of Alan Turing’s iconic imitation game or test and its central...
Received: 18 November 2010 / Accepted: 9 March 2011 (c) The Author(s) 2011. This article is publish...
AbstractThe widespread tendency, even within AI, to anthropomorphize machines makes it easier to con...
In his 1950 paper “Computing Machinery and Intelligence,” Alan Turing proposed that we can determine...
The Turing test is perhaps the most famous, most quoted, and probably most often misrepresented and ...
In this paper we consider transcripts which originated from a practical series of Turing’s Imitation...
Laplace, Turing and the "imitation game" impossible geometry : randomness, determinism and programs ...
International audienceFrom the physico-mathematical view point, the imitation game between man and m...
Giuseppe Longo. Laplace, Turing and the "imitation game" impossible geometry: randomness, determini...
Abstract: From the physico-mathematical view point, the imitation game between man and machine, prop...
Comparative tests work by finding the difference (or the absence of difference) between a reference ...
This issue of the Kybernetes journal is concerned with the philosophical question- Can a Machine Thi...
ABSTRACT. We show that the problem of whether two Turing Machines are functionally equivalent is und...
Gorman B, Thurau C, Bauckhage C, Humphrys M. Believability testing and Bayesian imitation in interac...
Can machines think? I present a study of Alan Turing’s iconic imitation game or test and its central...
Received: 18 November 2010 / Accepted: 9 March 2011 (c) The Author(s) 2011. This article is publish...
AbstractThe widespread tendency, even within AI, to anthropomorphize machines makes it easier to con...
In his 1950 paper “Computing Machinery and Intelligence,” Alan Turing proposed that we can determine...
The Turing test is perhaps the most famous, most quoted, and probably most often misrepresented and ...
In this paper we consider transcripts which originated from a practical series of Turing’s Imitation...