What is the most relevant legacy by Turing for epistemology of Artificial Intelligence (AI) and cognitive science? Of course, we could see it in the ideas set out in his well-known article of 1950, Computing Machinery and Intelligence. But how could his imitation game, and its following evolution in what we know as Turing Test, still be so relevant? What we want to argue is that the nature of imitation game as a method for evaluating research on intelligent artifacts, has not its core specifically in (natural) language capability as a way of showing the presence of intelligence in a certain entity, but in the interaction between human being and machines. Human-computer interaction is a particular field in information science for many important practical respects, but interaction between human being and machines is the deepest sense of Turing’s ideas on evaluation of intelligent behavior and entities, within and beyond its connection with natural language. And from this point of view it could be methodologically and epistemologically useful for further research in every discipline involving machine and artificial artifacts, especially as concerns the very current subject of consciousness and qualia. In what follows we will try to argue such a perspective by showing some field in which interaction, in connection with different sorts of language, could be of interest in the spirit of Turing’s 1950 article.

F. Bianchini, D. Bruni (2012). What Language for Turing Test in the Age of Qualia?. HOVE : AISB.

What Language for Turing Test in the Age of Qualia?

BIANCHINI, FRANCESCO;
2012

Abstract

What is the most relevant legacy by Turing for epistemology of Artificial Intelligence (AI) and cognitive science? Of course, we could see it in the ideas set out in his well-known article of 1950, Computing Machinery and Intelligence. But how could his imitation game, and its following evolution in what we know as Turing Test, still be so relevant? What we want to argue is that the nature of imitation game as a method for evaluating research on intelligent artifacts, has not its core specifically in (natural) language capability as a way of showing the presence of intelligence in a certain entity, but in the interaction between human being and machines. Human-computer interaction is a particular field in information science for many important practical respects, but interaction between human being and machines is the deepest sense of Turing’s ideas on evaluation of intelligent behavior and entities, within and beyond its connection with natural language. And from this point of view it could be methodologically and epistemologically useful for further research in every discipline involving machine and artificial artifacts, especially as concerns the very current subject of consciousness and qualia. In what follows we will try to argue such a perspective by showing some field in which interaction, in connection with different sorts of language, could be of interest in the spirit of Turing’s 1950 article.
2012
Revisiting Turing and his Test: Comprehensiveness, Qualia, and the Real World (AISB/IACAP Symposium)
34
40
F. Bianchini, D. Bruni (2012). What Language for Turing Test in the Age of Qualia?. HOVE : AISB.
F. Bianchini; D. Bruni
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11585/126164
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