Loebner Prize: Difference between revisions
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==2008 Loebner Prize== |
==2008 Loebner Prize== |
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The 2008 Competition is to be held on Sunday [[12 October]] in [[University of Reading]], UK. The event, which is being Co-Directed by [[Kevin Warwick]], will include a direct challenge on the [[Turing test]] as originally proposed by [[Alan Turing]]. The first place winner will receive |
The 2008 Competition is to be held on Sunday [[12 October]] in [[University of Reading]], UK. The event, which is being Co-Directed by [[Kevin Warwick]], will include a direct challenge on the [[Turing test]] as originally proposed by [[Alan Turing]]. The first place winner will receive $3000.00 and a bronze medal. |
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==2007 Loebner Prize== |
==2007 Loebner Prize== |
Revision as of 16:46, 16 January 2008
The Loebner Prize is an annual competition that awards prizes to the Chatterbot considered by the judges to be the most humanlike of those entered. The format of the competition is that of a standard Turing test. In the Loebner Prize, as in a Turing test, a human judge is faced with two computer screens. One is under the control of a computer, the other is under the control of a human. The judge poses questions to the two screens and receives answers. Based upon the answers, the judge must decide which screen is controlled by the human and which is controlled by the computer program.
The contest was begun in 1990 by Dr. Hugh Loebner in conjunction with the Cambridge Center for Behavioral Studies of Massachusetts, United States. It has since been associated with Flinders University, Dartmouth College, the Science Museum in London, and most recently University of Reading.
The Loebner Prize is sponsored by Crown Industries, Inc., of East Orange, NJ., manufactures of crowd control stanchions and brass rails and fittings.
Prizes
The prizes for each year include:
- $2,000 for the most human-seeming of all chatterbots for that year - awarded every year. In 2005, the prize was increased to $3,000, and the prize was $2,250 in 2006. In 2008 the prize will be $3000.00
- $25,000 for the first chatterbot that judges cannot distinguish from a real human in a text-only Turing test, and that can convince judges that the other (human) entity they are talking to simultaneously is a computer. (to be awarded once only)
- $100,000 to the first chatterbot that judges cannot distinguish from a real human in a Turing test that includes deciphering and understanding text, visual, and auditory input. (to be awarded once only)
The Loebner Prize dissolves once the $100,000 prize is won.
2008 Loebner Prize
The 2008 Competition is to be held on Sunday 12 October in University of Reading, UK. The event, which is being Co-Directed by Kevin Warwick, will include a direct challenge on the Turing test as originally proposed by Alan Turing. The first place winner will receive $3000.00 and a bronze medal.
2007 Loebner Prize
The 2007 Competition was held on Sunday, 21 October in New York City. The participants in the contest were:
- Rollo Carpenter from Icogno, creator of Jabberwacky
- Noah Duncan, private entry, creator of Cletus
- Robert Medeksza from Zabaware, creator of Ultra Hal Assistant
No bot passed the Turing test but the judges ranked the bots as "most human". The results of the contest were:
- 1st place: Robert Medeksza
- 2nd place: Noah Duncan
- 3rd place: Rollo Carpenter
The winner received $2250 and the Annual Medal. The runners up received $250 each.
2006 Loebner Prize
On Wednesday, August 30, the finalists for the 2006 Loebner Prize were announced.
The finalists were:
- Rollo Carpenter
- Richard Churchill and Marie-Claire Jenkins
- Noah Duncan
- Robert Medeksza
The contest was held on Sunday, 17 September at the Torrington Theatre, University College London.
Winners
Year | Winner | Program |
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2007 | Robert Medeksza | Ultra Hal |
2006 | Rollo Carpenter | Joan |
2005 | Rollo Carpenter | George |
2004 | Richard Wallace | A.L.I.C.E. |
2003 | Juergen Pirner | Jabberwock |
2002 | Kevin Copple | Ella |
2001 | Richard Wallace | A.L.I.C.E. |
2000 | Richard Wallace | A.L.I.C.E. |
1999 | Robby Garner | Albert One |
1998 | Robby Garner | Albert One |
1997 | David Wallace | Converse |
1996 | Jason Hutchens | HeX |
1995 | Joseph Weintraub | PC Therapist |
1994 | Thomas Whalen | TIPS |
1993 | June Wall | PC Therapist |
1992 | Joseph Weintraub | PC Therapist |
1991 | Joseph Weintraub | PC Therapist 3 |