Robots face new test of creative abilities
The artefact could be painting, poetry, architectural design or a fictional story. "Creativity is not unique to human intelligence, but it is one of the hallmarks of human intelligence," said Prof Riedl. Algorithms have already created stories and paintings although according to Prof Riedl "no existing story generation system can pass the Lovelace 2.0 test".
Inspiring music
Experts had mixed feelings about how good such a test would be. Prof Alan Woodward, a computer expert from the University of Surrey thinks it could help make a key distinction. "I think this new test shows that we all now recognise that humans are more than just very advanced machines, and that creativity is one of those features that separates us from computers - for now."
But David Wood, chairman of the London Futurists, is not convinced. "It's a popular view that humans differ fundamentally from AIs because humans possess creativity whereas AIs only follow paths of strict rationality," he said. "This is a comforting view, but I think it's wrong. There are already robots that manifest rudimentary emotional intelligence and computers can already write inspiring music."
The 65-year-old Turing test is successfully passed if a computer is mistaken for a human more than 30% of the time during a series of five-minute keyboard conversations.
Back in June a computer program called Eugene Goostman, which simulates a 13-year-old Ukrainian boy, was said to have passed the Turing test although some experts disputed the claims.
Jane Wakefield