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Effects of lying in practical Turing tests

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Warwick, K. and Shah, H. (2016) Effects of lying in practical Turing tests. AI & SOCIETY, 31 (1). pp. 5-15. ISSN 0951-5666 doi: 10.1007/s00146-013-0534-3

Abstract/Summary

Interpretation of utterances affects an interrogator’s determination of human from machine during live Turing tests. Here, we consider transcripts realised as a result of a series of practical Turing tests that were held on 23 June 2012 at Bletchley Park, England. The focus in this paper is to consider the effects of lying and truth-telling on the human judges by the hidden entities, whether human or a machine. Turing test transcripts provide a glimpse into short text communication, the type that occurs in emails: how does the reader determine truth from the content of a stranger’s textual message? Different types of lying in the conversations are explored, and the judge’s attribution of human or machine is investigated in each test.

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Item Type Article
URI https://reading-clone.eprints-hosting.org/id/eprint/37189
Item Type Article
Refereed Yes
Divisions Science
Uncontrolled Keywords Deception detection Hidden human interviewer Lying Machine Truth Turing test
Publisher Springer
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