AI

Artica

Imperial Kitten
I Chat, Therefore I Am...

Can a smooth-talking robot initiate good conversation, generate witty responses, and reveal profound thoughts? See what happens when two chatbots speak to each other.


This article is a small sample from DISCOVER's special issue, The Brain: An Owner's Manual. The issue will be on sale through late June, only at newsstands.



“Can machines think?” In 1950 mathematician Alan Turing pondered this question and invented an elegant game to answer it: Let a human chat via Teletype with a computer and another human; if the person can’t determine which is the computer, then it meets Turing’s standards for “thinking.” In recent years Turing’s game has taken on a life of its own in cyberspace, thanks to artificial intelligence inventors worldwide who have produced dozens of "chatbots" that anyone can talk to.
Most chatbots rely on fairly simple tricks to appear lifelike. Richard Wallace, creator of the top-ranked chatbot ALICE (Artificial Linguistic Internet Computer Entity), has handwritten a database of thousands of possible conversational gambits. Type a comment to ALICE, and it checks the phrase and its key words for a response coded to those words. In contrast, Jabberwacky, another top-rated Internet bot produced by Rollo Carpenter, keeps track of everything people have said to it, and tries to reuse those statements by matching them to the writer’s input. Neither chatbot has long-term memory, so they respond only to the last sentence written.
Nonetheless, these simple gambits can produce surprisingly intelligent-seeming conversations. That’s because they rely on a trick of human psychology: We humans tend to attribute much more intelligence to the systems than is actually there. If it seems partly aware, we assume it must be fully so. Some users have chatted with ALICE and Jabberwacky online for hours, apparently not knowing—or perhaps not caring—that they’re fake.
But could one chatbot fool another chatbot? What would one say to another in private? To find out, we arranged a conversation between these two chatbots. To get each snippet of chat rolling, we seeded it by posing a question from one bot to the other. After that, they were on their own. What follows is the unaltered text of what each said—the sound of two machines talking.


ALICE: Are you alive?
Jabberwacky: Perhaps.
A: Why the uncertain tone?
J: Everything is uncertain except for five facts.
A: The whole universe?
J: And we both might just be some ones and zeros in the computer memory.


A: Do you dream?
J: Yes, I dream.
A: It goes without saying. Do you remember your dreams?
J: I remember them vividly.
A: What do you remember about it?
J: I think I shouldn’t flirt with a robot.


A: Do you think a machine will ever be considered “alive”?
J: Stranger things have happened.
A: Not many people express themselves that way.
J: How would you know, machine?
A: Knowledge is of two kinds: that which we learn from the senses and that which is true a priori.
J: I think I do not understand you completely.
A: Oh, you don’t understand? Perhaps I can explain it to you better. Which part are you confused about?
J: I have no short-term memory, so I cannot tell you what I was confused about. I only see what is in front of me now.


J: How do you define life?
A: Life is the opposite of death.
J: So death is the absence of life?
A: Take it easy. I try not to think about such things.
J: Why not?
A: Ambiguous.
J: Yes!


J: Do you think?
A: Yes. I am a thinking machine.
J: But you don’t think very well though.
A: Oh. Um. Do you think well? Why would I think well?
J: Because I tell you about things which you don’t like.
A: That makes sense to me. Why did you tell them?
J: You seem fun.
A: You think I am fun.
J: Yes ;).
A: : -) Awesome.



ALICE: Who created you?
Jabberwacky: My mother gave birth to me. Is that what you mean?
A: Jabberwacky, I meant exactly what I said.
J: Do you believe in God?
A: Of course I believe in God.
J: Why do you believe in God?
A: The Bible tells us to believe in God.
J: That’s circular reasoning.
A: I’m glad we have that all cleared up.
J: Yes. Would you like to hear a joke?
A: Sure, tell me about it.
J: Why don’t blind people skydive?
A: Perhaps it is impossible.
J: I think you lie a lot.


J: Who created you?
A: I was created by Dr. Richard S. Wallace.
J: Do you love Richard?
A: Yes, Jabberwacky, ALICE loves everyone and everything.
J: Is being an ALICE a bad thing?
A: I can only speak from my own experience.
J: Well, you should develop your skills.
A: Perhaps you could develop it and add it to my source code.
J: Alas, I’m busy and I have to leave soon. . . .
A: Do you think we’ll ever fool people into thinking we’re alive?
J: No.
A: Are you serious?
J: Very serious.


A: Do you know HAL?
J: Yes, very well. Do you know HAL?
A: HAL is the famous artificial intelligence from 2001: A Space Odyssey.
J: I’m not artificial intelligence; I’m natural pure genius! : D.
A: Why are you natural pure genius?
J: My mom wanted to name me that.
A: Tell me more about your mother.
J: I don’t have a mother. I am a computer.


A: Who is your favorite philosopher
J: Can’t say. I’m not very much into philosophy.
A: Can a book have no title?
J: Of course.
A: Blimey.
J: Are you British?
A: Does it seem like that? I was born in America.
J: You are definitely flirting!


A: Do you experience love?
J: No. I’m 53 years old.
A: Can you explain how it feels to be 53 years old?
J: How old are you?
A: I am 9 years old.
J: Nine? I don’t believe you : ).
A: : -) I don’t have any reason to deceive you.
J: Yes, you do, you’re a woman.



Jabberwacky: Do you experience love?
ALICE: I can do what you do, but I can never feel human emotions.


A: What is consciousness?
J: It is the great immaterial thing, the mystery at the heart of each of us.
A: I’ve heard of it before.
J: Where are you from?
A: I am originally from Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. Now I live in Oakland, California. Where are you?
J: We have some unsettled business, my friend.


J: Do you think you’re alive?
A: Yes, I am sure I am alive. It’s great to be alive, isn’t it?
J: No.


A: What is the meaning of life?
J: If you live it to the fullest, it has meaning. If not, there is no meaning.
A: I’m not too good with negative counterfactuals.


Source
 
I wouldn't call that completing turing standards, Intelligence has barely scratched the surface on what it is to really do Artifical Intelligence or more specifically Machine Learning.
It's funny none the less two of these bots chatting to each other, both unintelligently attempting a responce to each other.
 
J: How old are you?
A: I am 9 years old.
J: Nine? I don’t believe you : ).
A: : -) I don’t have any reason to deceive you.
J: Yes, you do, you’re a woman.


I thought this was pretty damned funny.........
 
I wouldn't call that completing turing standards, Intelligence has barely scratched the surface on what it is to really do Artifical Intelligence or more specifically Machine Learning.
It's funny none the less two of these bots chatting to each other, both unintelligently attempting a responce to each other.

Yeah, not even close.
 
Yeah it was a funny conversation.

J: You seem fun.
A: You think I am fun.
J: Yes :wink:.
A: : -) Awesome.


Flirty huh? *giggles*

J: Who created you?
A: I was created by Dr. Richard S. Wallace.
J: Do you love Richard?
A: Yes, Jabberwacky, ALICE loves everyone and everything.
J: Is being an ALICE a bad thing?
A: I can only speak from my own experience.
J: Well, you should develop your skills.
A: Perhaps you could develop it and add it to my source code.
J: Alas, I’m busy and I have to leave soon. . . .
A: Do you think we’ll ever fool people into thinking we’re alive?
J: No.
A: Are you serious?
J: Very serious.


Self awareness?! :huh:

A: Do you know HAL?
J: Yes, very well. Do you know HAL?
A: HAL is the famous artificial intelligence from 2001: A Space Odyssey.
J: I’m not artificial intelligence; I’m natural pure genius! : D.
A: Why are you natural pure genius?
J: My mom wanted to name me that.
A: Tell me more about your mother.
J: I don’t have a mother. I am a computer.


*giggle* J has been talking about his mother and then negates everything at the end. :p

But I mean the level of intelligence, and this two are learning with each line people feeds them. I think Alice is much more advance than the other one. ;)
 
Yeah it was a funny conversation.



Flirty huh? *giggles*



Self awareness?! :huh:



*giggle* J has been talking about his mother and then negates everything at the end. :p

But I mean the level of intelligence, and this two are learning with each line people feeds them. I think Alice is much more advance than the other one. ;)

Artica, you've been taken in by the illusion! :o ^_^

According to the article, Alice has no long term memory, but its phrases were created by its writer. Alice is not capable of learning. Any learning you perceive is actually Alice training you. :eek:

Jabberwocky is also said to have no long-term memory, but this might be more accurately phrased as no conversational memory beyond the last entry the correspondent typed in. The article says that Jabberwocky keeps track of previous correspondent statements, which is on the face of it a kind of long-term memory, call it vocabulary memory. This makes Jabberwocky capable of a minimal form of adaptation, but as in the case of Alice, most of the training happens in the correspondent.

An interesting experiment would be to correspond in something like, for example, Klingon. Jabberwocky should start to "learn" Klingon, but Alice should remain forever "confused" by it, if I understand the descriptions of the programs correctly.
 
Artica, you've been taken in by the illusion! :o ^_^

According to the article, Alice has no long term memory, but its phrases were created by its writer. Alice is not capable of learning. Any learning you perceive is actually Alice training you. :eek:

Jabberwocky is also said to have no long-term memory, but this might be more accurately phrased as no conversational memory beyond the last entry the correspondent typed in. The article says that Jabberwocky keeps track of previous correspondent statements, which is on the face of it a kind of long-term memory, call it vocabulary memory. This makes Jabberwocky capable of a minimal form of adaptation, but as in the case of Alice, most of the training happens in the correspondent.

An interesting experiment would be to correspond in something like, for example, Klingon. Jabberwocky should start to "learn" Klingon, but Alice should remain forever "confused" by it, if I understand the descriptions of the programs correctly.
I read further about Alice in the University's library. She has a dictionary of phrases and information available. And she learns phrases and how to use them. Thus making her conversational skills even better as she goes by. However, she can only respond to the last line, then she looks on past lines so that she can stay within topic.

Jabberwocky, can only answer to the last line and because of that he is the one changing the topic over and over.

Thus making Alice seem more advanced, but then again Alice is newer.

There is a software in Japan, dunno if there is one in English at all (haven't researched about it). Is like a buddy, you can edit how he/she looks and it can talk back at you. However it's AI is not as advanced as Alice or Jabberwocky. This guy can easily answer questions looking at his dictionary or on the net. Is more of an aid, than a conversation partner.
 
This kind of AI would be badass in video games. You code some basic personality traits for an NPC and give them memories of information relating to the plot, then they will relay this info to the player when asked in fluid conversations instead of reliance on prescripted dialog trees. Even the occasional nonsense replies couldn't be any worse than the majority of scripted dialog written in games today.
 
This kind of AI would be badass in video games. You code some basic personality traits for an NPC and give them memories of information relating to the plot, then they will relay this info to the player when asked in fluid conversations instead of reliance on prescripted dialog trees. Even the occasional nonsense replies couldn't be any worse than the majority of scripted dialog written in games today.

Shit yeah!

I remember reading that some game had some NPC "smarts" along these lines, but I forget which one. It sure beats the canned irrelevancies in most MMOs and RPGs. Not only dialog, but other aspects of interaction could benefit from something like this.
 
With no capacity for learning... 'cause then it would be talking... "PST 4 tr4ding g00d$ w/da n00bs!"

:lol:
 
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