Categories: AI/ML News

AI can seem more human than real humans in a classic Turing test

A new University of California San Diego study unveils the first empirical evidence that a modern artificial intelligence system can pass the Turing test—a major scientific benchmark that asks whether a machine can imitate human conversation so convincingly that people can’t reliably tell it apart from a real person. In a series of experiments, people were often unable to tell the difference between humans and advanced large language models (LLMs).
AI Generated Robotic Content

Share
Published by
AI Generated Robotic Content

Recent Posts

Intelligence is Free, Now What? Data Systems for, of, and by Agents

... government of the people, by the people, for the people ...     — Abraham Lincoln,…

15 hours ago

Taming Text-to-Sounding Video Generation via Advanced Modality Condition and Interaction

This study focuses on Text-to-Sounding-Video (T2SV) generation, which aims to generate a video with synchronized…

15 hours ago

Enrich your datasets with business context: Migrating from legacy Topics to semantic datasets in Amazon Quick

If you’ve been managing Amazon Quick legacy Topics alongside your datasets, you know the challenge:…

15 hours ago

A developer’s guide to publishing agents in Gemini Enterprise and Google Cloud Marketplace

Software-as-a-service (SaaS) is evolving into Agents-as-a-service (AaaS). Instead of isolated applications, developers are creating AI…

15 hours ago

Meta Now Lets Anyone Use Your Instagram Photos in AI Images—Unless You Opt Out

As part of Meta’s Muse Image model rollout, Instagram users with public accounts need to…

16 hours ago