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Computer 'can talk like a baby'

Wednesday, 28 February, 2001, 22:11 GMT - An Israeli company has created a
conversational computer program it claims could revolutionise the way
people interact with machines.

Artificial Intelligence Enterprises (Ai) says its Hal program can already
converse convincingly and has the vocabulary and grasp of language of a
15-month-old child.

Already transcripts of conversations generated by the computerised child
have reportedly fooled independent judges into thinking they were reading a
write-up of a real conversation.

Now, the company is working on giving its creation the conversational
ability of a five-year-old. Then it plans to use the program to do away
with keyboards and let people simply talk to their computers.

Creating a computer program that can converse as fluently as people has
long been the aim of artificial intelligence researchers around the globe.
But over 50 years of work has shown little more than how difficult it is to
program a computer to do something that comes effortlessly to most people.

But now New Scientist magazine reports that Artificial Intelligence
Enterprises has produced a program that can convincingly simulate human
conversation.

Before now, conversational computer programs have used fairly crude
techniques when replying to questions or statements. Typically, the program
seizes on a key word, and then uses statistical techniques and a formal
understanding of grammar to generate appropriate replies or pick them from a
pre-generated list.

These programs cope badly with short sentences where there is little
context that can be used to fine tune the computer's guess.

By contrast Hal, just like its namesake in Arthur C Clarke's 2001: A Space
Odyssey, gets its ability by being trained by a "carer", who feeds in
stories and responds to questions as if they were the parent of a child.

The learning algorithms underpinning the program gradually learn what are
appropriate responses and how to react to the conversational style of its
tutor.

So far, the program, which is small enough to work on a desktop computer,
generates convincing baby talk such as "Ball, mummy".

Learning to produce convincing responses takes it only a few days. Now, the
company is working on ways to make Hal talk and respond like a five-year-old.

But Jason Hutchens, chief scientist at Ai, has said that Hal is not really
intelligent but is simply a better simulator of human conversation than
others.

An early version of the conversation simulator was tuned by letting people
converse with it via the web. One therapist said typing and talking to the
program was like conversing with a psychotic. Mr Hutchens said many people
were simply happy to type in rude words to see how the program responded.

Mr Hutchens has been working on conversational computer programs for many
years. In 1996, one of his creations won the Loebner Contest that gives a
prize to a program giving the most human-like performance when holding a
conversation.

The contest is an instance of the Turing Test first posed by brilliant
British mathematician Alan Turing. He devised the test as a way of showing
a machine was intelligent. The key test, said Turing, was whether a machine
could fool someone into thinking they were talking to a real person.

Related to this story:
Alan Turing: Father of the computer (29 Apr 99 | UK)
Clicking for consciousness (01 Sep 00 | Sci/Tech)
Albert is top talking computer (28 Jan 99 | Sci/Tech)
Roaring T Rex robot unveiled (06 Feb 01 | Sci/Tech)
Our friends electric (05 Feb 01 | dot life)

Internet links:
Artificial Intelligence Enterprises
Jason Hutchens
Loebner Prize
New Scientist

BBC News Online: Sci/Tech
By BBC News Online internet reporter Mark Ward
http://news.bbc.co.uk/low/english/sci/tech/newsid_1194000/1194565.stm

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