
If a ‘bot’ is unable to understand the GUI it is unable to gain access to the site.

Many papers regarding the test summarize the imitation game, while discussing variations of the tests, evaluating the standards for passing and considering the rules a computer must follow to be able to pass the test.ĥ Engineers have used the Turing test to help aid online securityĮngineers have used the Turing test to help aid online security. If the machine is able to interact with a human by online instant messaging, the receiving human would not be able to determine whether the sender is human or machine.Ĥ The Turing Test is for determining whether a computer can actually think.

In doing so, it highlights possibilities for non-hierarchical interplay between human and computer agents.Presentation on theme: "The Turing Test Alan Turing."- Presentation transcript:ģ The Turing test was developed by Alan Turing in the mid-1900s, it is a test that is able to quantify machines ability for cognitive thinking and directly correlate this with the thinking of a human mind. On the basis of this distinction, it considers different approaches to musical AI. This paper draws out the threads of intentional agency and human indistinguishability from Turing’s original 1950 characterisation of AI. Nonetheless, there are aspects of musical AI and the Turing test that can be considered in the context of non-language-based interactive environments–-in particular, when dealing with real-time musical AI, especially interactive improvisation software. Similarly, there is no intrinsic connection between musical AI and the language-based Turing test, though there have been many attempts to forge connections between them. Yet, it is worth noting, both are centred on a behavioural model of intelligence. The field of behaviour-based artificial intelligence (AI), with its roots in the robotics research of Rodney Brooks, is not predominantly tied to linguistic interaction in the sense of the classic Turing test (or, "imitation game"). 7 at AISB/IACAP World Congress 2012: Alan Turing Year 2012, 2-, Birmingham, UK.

In: Revisiting Turing and his Test: Comprehensiveness, Qualia, and the Real World, Symposium no. Interactive intelligence: behaviour-based AI, musical HCI and the Turing Test. Linson, Adam Dobbyn, Chris and Laney, Robin
