At a conference at Dartmouth in the 1950s, Alan Turing; the mathematician and computer scientist who had played a crucial role in cracking the Enigma Code in the second world war was engaged in conversations with other intellectuals about machines, computation, and future technologies.
Originally called “The Imitation Game” (a movie of this name was released in 2014), the Turing Test as we now know it, was proposed to answer the question “can machines think like humans?” To this end, a human would be situated apart from both another human and a machine. Both the computer (machine) and the human would respond to the queries of the human subject. When the subject can not discern if the response came from a human or a machine, the test is said to have been passed.
When ChatGPT was released on November 30, 2022, many feel that at that moment, the Turing Test was officially passed; and this change has impacted many aspects of the global society already. Time can be saved through the use of ChatGPT, written content can be improved, tedious writing tasks can be assisted, and human written output can be bolstered. Of course, there are challebges as well; teachers in particular face some challenge at this time in discerning if a student has authentically written the work they are submitting for grading.
These topics are all covered in other blog posts, and so today’s topic answers the question “What is the Turing Test?”