Turing test

noun
1.
a proposed test of a computer's ability to think, requiring that the covert substitution of the computer for one of the participants in a keyboard and screen dialogue should be undetectable by the remaining human participant
turing test in Culture

Turing test definition


A test proposed by British mathematician Alan Turing, and often taken as a test of whether a computer has humanlike intelligence. If a panel of human beings conversing with an unknown entity (via keyboard, for example) believes that that entity is human, and if the entity is actually a computer, then the computer is said to have passed the Turing test.

turing test in Technology
artificial intelligence
A criterion proposed by Alan Turing in 1950 for deciding whether a computer is intelligent. Turing called it "the Imitation Game" and offered it as a replacement for the question, "Can machines think?"
A human holds a written conversation on any topic with an unseen correspondent (nowadays it might be by electronic mail or chat). If the human believes he is talking to another human when he is really talking to a computer then the computer has passed the Turing test and is deemed to be intelligent.
Turing predicted that within 50 years (by the year 2000) technological progress would produce computing machines with a capacity of 10**9 bits, and that with such machinery, a computer program would be able to fool the average questioner for 5 minutes about 70% of the time.
The Loebner Prize is a competition to find a computer program which can pass an unrestricted Turing test.
Julia (https://fuzine.mt.cs.cmu.edu/mlm/julia.html) is a program that attempts to pass the Turing test.
See also AI-complete.
Turing's paper (https://cogprints.ecs.soton.ac.uk/archive/00000499/00/turing.html).
(2004-02-17)