Creative Alternative To Turing Test Proposed

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A Georgia Institute of Technology professor has proposed an alternative to the Turing Test in assessing artificial intelligence. It would be based more on creativity than communication.

The idea of the test comes from a 1950 paper by Alan Turing in which he talked about the possibility that a computer could one day pass itself off as a human while answering a series of questions. Though Turing never stipulated time limits or “pass marks” there have been numerous attempts to set down criteria and see whether a computer could “pass the test.”

Mark Riedl believes the various “Turing tests” aren’t the best way to measure artificial intelligence as they concentrate on too narrow a skill and put the emphasis on deception.

He’s instead proposing an update to a 2001 idea, the Lovelace exam, named after Ada Lovelace (pictured). She had argued that creativity was the key to distinguishing human intelligence. Three researchers at the Rensselear Polytechnic Institute proposed a test by which a computer would have to create an artistic work in a way that the computer’s creators and operators couldn’t explain.

Riedl says his proposal aims to take that principle, but make it more objectively measurable. His rules are:

For the test, the artificial agent passes if it develops a creative artifact from a subset of artistic genres deemed to require human-level intelligence and the artifact meets certain creative constraints given by a human evaluator. Further, the human evaluator must determine that the object is a valid representative of the creative subset and that it meets the criteria. The created artifact needs only meet these criteria but does not need to have any aesthetic value. Finally, a human referee must determine that the combination of the subset and criteria is not an impossible standard.

Put in simpler terms, the computer must not only create an artistic work (such as a picture or story), but it must meet specific content that’s set down in advance. For example, rather than just create a story, it might have to contain particular characters and plot points.

Comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko… Sings The Beatles

Amazing video by Andrew Huang who recreated the music of the Beatles’ Across The Universe using nothing but samples of the audio recordings of Comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko made by the Rosetta probe.

The track is part of a forthcoming album that Andrew is producing which will also include eight original compositions using the Rosetta samples.


The Great Steampunk Race [Short CG Animated Movie]

A fun short CG animated film by Digital Light Studio. Steam up your engines, gentlemen!

Only the best of the best race steam trains have reached the final. Red Arrow accepts a challenge of Iron Shark. Black villain is ready to do everything just to get to the finish line first. But his opponent is brave and courageous.

[Digital Light Studio | Via The Presurfer]

The Most Useless Gadget in the World: Captain Jules’s Useless Box [Video]

Sure, I’m sure you’ve seen similar boxes on the web before, but now you can actually purchase one: Captain Jules’s Useless Box!

Captain Jules’s Useless Box is a very simple device. Inside the wooden box (with real metal accents) resides a bunch of gears and the latest in electricity-powered motors. Turn the switch on, and a bit of machinery will poke out and flip the switch off. That’s all the Captain Jules’s Useless Box does. But it’s enough of an oddity to make it right at home on your desk or bookshelf. And each and every time someone new picks it up and flips the switch, the confused look on their face will bring a smile to yours – just like the first time Captain Jules saw it at a marketplace in Inner Outlandia.

[Captain Jules’s Useless Box]

Fun Game: Hoverkraft Levitating Construction Challenge

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The Hoverkraft Levitating Construction Challenge is a fun old-school building game with a twist. Instead of just stacking pieces on regular, boring surface, players take turn at building a structure on a levitating magnetic platform.

Hoverkraft is intended for two players, but it’s fun to challenge yourself to build bigger and better structures. And it’s a fast game, lasting anywhere from 30 seconds (what? we were distracted) to 5 minutes. Bring it to a party and you can have an entire tournament in a few hours. Your friends may curse you for introducing them to Hoverkraft at first, but they’ll be drawn back to it. There’s something addictive about it.

[Hoverkraft Levitating Construction Challenge]