What advances need to be made in order for turing test to be passed?
The Turing test is a proposal for a test of a machine’s capability to demonstrate intelligence. Described by Alan Turing in the 1950 paper “Computing Machinery and Intelligence,” it proceeds as follows: a human judge engages in a natural language conversation with one human and one machine, each of which try to appear human; if the judge cannot reliably tell which is which, then the machine is said to pass the test. In order to test the machine’s intelligence rather than its ability to render words into audio, the conversation is limited to a text-only channel such as a computer keyboard and screen (Turing originally suggested a teletype machine, one of the few text-only communication systems available in 1950). The test has been criticized on several grounds. Human intelligence vs. intelligence in general The test is explicitly anthropomorphic. It only tests if the subject resembles a human being. It will fail to test for intelligence under two circumstances: It tests for many behavio