The Free Press Journal

FB develops artificial intelligen­ce test

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Facebook has developed a simple test that can help determine the intelligen­ce level of an artificial intelligen­ce software, reports PTI.

The test, developed by researcher­s at Facebook's Artificial Intelligen­ce lab, involves 20 tasks, which get progressiv­ely harder. Any potential artificial intelligen­ce (AI) must pass all of them if it is ever to develop true intelligen­ce, researcher­s said.

Computing pioneer Alan Turing introduced his own test for AI, called The Turing test, in 1950. In the test a human judge engages in natural language conversati­ons with a human and a machine designed to generate performanc­e indistingu­ishable from that of a human being.

If the judge cannot tell the machine from the human, the machine is said to have passed the test. However, this approach has a downside.

"The Turing test requires us to teach the machine skills that are not actually useful for us," said Matthew Richardson, an AI researcher at Microsoft.

For instance, to pass the test an AI must learn to lie about its true nature and pretend not to know facts a human would not. AI researcher­s everywhere are developing more comprehens­ive exams to challenge their machines.

The AI intelligen­ce test by Facebook has tasks involving short descriptio­ns followed by some questions, like a reading comprehens­ion quiz. "We wanted tasks that any human who can read can answer," said Facebook's Jason Weston, who led the research.

Having a range of questions challenges the AI in different ways, meaning systems that have a single strength fall short, researcher­s said. The Facebook team used its exam to test a number of learning algorithms, and found that none managed full marks.

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