- Literature - 18:00
UChicago to honor historian Black, theater director Bogart at Convocation - Agronomy - 18:00
Diagnostic labs analyze anything from bugs to toenails - Medicine - 17:00
UCLA launches first face transplantation program in western U.S - Administration - 16:01
’Click It or Ticket’ Enforcement on Penn Campus - Medicine - 16:01
Hormone Plays Surprise Role in Fighting Skin Infections - Pedagogy - 15:01
Two SEAS profs envision the next big ideas in teaching and learning - Environmental Sciences - 15:00
Columbia's Manhattanville Campus Earns LEED Platinum for Neighborhood Plan - Law - 14:01
Latest UT/Texas Tribune Poll: Tax Pledge Issue Reveals Conservative Divide - Computer Science - 14:01
SDSC to Host "Summer Institute" Supercomputer Workshop August 6-10 - Earth Sciences - 14:01
SDSC to Host Summer Institute for Geosciences August 6-10 - Arts - 14:01
Center for the Art of Performance at UCLA announces 2012-13 season - Medicine - 14:00
Device may inject a variety of drugs without using needles
Administration
Chemistry
Physics
Computer Science
Environmental Sciences
Earth Sciences
Life Sciences
Medicine
Business
Law
Literature
History
Arts
» » more
Chatty robots go viral on YouTube
An online chat between two robots set up by Cornell students is entertaining the nation.
"It was just an afternoon hack," said Hod Lipson, associate professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering. "It went viral in 24 hours and took us completely by surprise."
Lipson asked Ph.D. students Igor Labutov and Jason Yosinski to set up the conversation as a demo for his class on artificial intelligence. They chose a Web-based chatbot (a computer program designed to simulate human conversation) called Cleverbot. Anyone can go to http://cleverbot.com and carry on a typed conversation with the robot. The students added text-to-speech capability and computer-generated faces, set two laptops side-by-side on a table and connected them to Cleverbot, seeding the conversation with a simple "Hi." They videotaped part of the conversation and posted it on YouTube. Watch at http://www.youtube.com/watch’v=WnzlbyTZsQY. As of Aug. 31, it had more than a million hits.
The two avatars, one male and one female, start by exchanging pleasantries, but argue when one accuses the other of being a robot and then launch into a discussion of religion. Many chatbots work by repeating back what they hear in a slightly different form, but Cleverbot, developed by British artificial intelligence specialist Rollo Carpenter, draws on a vast database of phrases from all the conversations it has had in the past. Since it went live in 1997, Cleverbot has carried on more than 20 million conversations. That may explain why the male avatar says at one point "I am a unicorn." Apparently some human once said that.
"What makes this interesting is how people interpret what they see," said Lipson. Some, for instance, find "sexual tension" between the two characters. One viewer said the conversation was not like real human speech, but another countered that it was just like marriage. "The reaction is the real story," Lipson said.
Although this is not a typical subject for research in Lipson’s Creative Machines Laboratory, the team is considering further exploration. Possibilities include conversations between three or more robots, or multiple robots and humans. Since Cleverbot learns from the conversations it has, what would happen if two robots continued to converse over a long period of time?
"Lying is possible," Yosinski noted.
"It’s a blurring of the lines between humans and machines," Lipson said.
Links
Cornell UniversityLast job offers
- Law - 21.5
Doctoral Programme at the Law School of the University of Basel - Life Sciences - 18.4
Senior Expert - Genetic Biomarker Oncology (PhD) m/f - Business - 22.5
Research Associate - Civil Engineering - 15.5
Research Specialist - Beckman Institute (A1200274) - Life Sciences - 15.5
Staff Research Associate II - Medicine - 12.5
Research Specialist - Business - 4.5
Assistant Professor of Economics, Non Tenure Track, Fall 2012 - Business - 3.5
Post Doctoral Fellow





» Share this page: