C R Hunt - Oct 15, 2010:
Well, the respected work of B. Watterson on artificial personalities might be appropriate for this forum: http://www.gocomics.com/calvinandhobbes/2010/10/14/
Now that’s what I’m talking about! It just occurred to me though that humor is something that ought to work both ways and I recalled reading this news article a few years ago:
http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2007/08/02/1995267.htm
Ctrl + Alt + Del if you’ve heard this one before
Experts in artificial intelligence have built a computer program that can understand simple jokes, marking an important step in making robots seem friendlier to humans, the weekly New Scientist reports.
Previous attempts at getting machines to understand humour have failed miserably, because what is funny to humans is subjective and complex - and fiendishly difficult to program.
But Julia Taylor and Lawrence Mazlack of the University of Cincinnati in Ohio have devised a prototype joke-detection software.
They began by loading a program with a database of words, extracted from a children’s dictionary to keep things simple, and then supplied it with examples of how the same word can have different meanings depending on the context.
When presented with a text, the program uses that knowledge to work out how new words may relate to each other, and what they probably mean.
If it fails to find a word that matches its context, it rummages around in a digital pronunciation guide for similar-sounding words.
And if any of those words are a better fit for the rest of the sentence, the passage is flagged, “ha ha”, as a joke.
So far, the joke-bot only understands rather leaden puns and still delivers a blank look when facing more complex stuff or dead-pan humour.