


While Alan Turing - circa 1950 - couldn’t have foreseen the sophisticated interactive entertainment of today, and his celebrated “test” was largely theoretical, the BotPrize winners certainly exhibited a high degree of artificial intelligence.īut did they actually pass the Turing test?

Think about that: A machine (two of them, in fact) appeared more human than actual humans.Ĭue Skynet killer-robot scenarios. Two of these digital warriors managed to earn a 52 percent “human rating,” which exceeded any human contestant. Each combatant had a “judging gun” in addition to his normal complement of weaponry, and the goal - for the artificial players, anyway - was to pass themselves off as human. The final leg of the contest saw four human competitors duke it out with an equal number of built-in bots and six digital entrants (bots) attempting to masquerade as human.
