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Turing's Test Revisited

Proceedings of the 1988 IEEE International Conference on Systems, Man, and Cybernetics, 2005
Turing suggested to replace the question "Can machines think?" with a question concerning the so called "imitation game". In the first part of this note, we examine some epistemological problems concerning the structure of the imitation game and revealing an internal tension in Turing's position.
Guccione S., TAMBURRINI, GUGLIELMO
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The Turing Test*

Minds and Machines, 2000
Turing's test has been much misunderstood. Recently unpublished material by Turing casts fresh light on his thinking and dispels a number of philosophical myths concerning the Turing test. Properly understood, the Turing test withstands objections that are popularly believed to be fatal.
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Beyond the Turing Test

Journal of Logic, Language and Information, 2000
zbMATH Open Web Interface contents unavailable due to conflicting licenses.
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The Turing Test

International Journal of Synthetic Emotions, 2014
This paper appraises some of the prevailing ideas surrounding one of Turing's brilliant ideas, his imitation game experiment, and considers judge performance in assessing machine thinking in the light of practical Turing tests. The emphasis is not on philosophical aspects as to whether machines can think or not but rather on the nature of the ...
Kevin Warwick, Huma Shah
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Turing's Test

2004
Abstract Finds fault with Turing's answer to the question, ‘Can a computer think’? Turing believed that if the answers given by a computer and a person leave an interpreter unable to discriminate between them, then computers must be said to be able to think. The author objects that in order for a computer to think, it must mean something
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Turing’s Test

1990
Abstract In the October 1950 issue of Mind A. M. Turing predicted that by the year 2000 it will be possible to build a computer that will have at least a 30 per cent chance of fooling an average inter rogator into thinking it is a person (Turing 1950). Given that Turing allowed his interrogator only a five-minute interview, and given the
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Turing’s Test

2010
Will we succeed one day in constructing machines capable of thinking? This is a more profound question than it at first seems, and has been one of the most hotly debated topics among philosophers over the centuries. When computers first appeared, these debates flared up again and their tone became more pressing. Nowadays, with computer programs capable
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Alan Turing and the Turing Test

2007
The study of Alan Turing’s life and work shows how the origin of the Turing Test lies in Turing’s formulation of the concept of computability and the question of its limits.
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The Turing Test

2021
Abstract The relationship between AI and deception was initially explored by Alan Turing, who famously proposed in 1950 a practical test addressing the question “Can machines think?” This chapter argues that Turing’s proposal of the Imitation Game, now more commonly called the Turing test, located the prospects of AI not just in ...
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