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We're going to do a little test together – Take a look at this image and tell me what you see.
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Okay, and now this one, this one and this one.
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This is an inkblot test, similar to the famous Rorschach test, designed by Swiss psychologist
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Hermann Rorschach in the 1920s. It’s been used since 1939 to examine your personality
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by looking at what you associate with these random ink blots.
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So when I look at them I see… a masquerade mask, two people surrounded by evil leg-eating
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fish, a leaf and a clown face.
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But we haven't only tested these images with people.
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Recently Google researchers showed these images to four different artificial intelligence
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systems. They labelled their participants robot 1, 2, 3 and 4. And the robots all had
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quite different responses.
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In the first image, the robots saw a hook, barrette, art and one said it was a Rorschach inkblot.
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In the second a jigsaw puzzle, fleur-de-lis, a design and a black ink splotch illustration.
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In the third a mask, pin, isolated and another Rorschach inkblot.
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And in the fourth image a hook, handle-bar mustache, a print and a black face paint print.
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So… if a machine can understand and independently answer a personality test... Can computers
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have personalities?
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The term “Robot” was coined by Czech playwright Karel Capek, in his 1920 play Rossum’s Universal
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Robots. Typically the word makes people think of a metal-clad machine with blinking lights
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and a monotone voice, or a modern version of that, but robots include machines that
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dispose of bombs, perform delicate surgeries and virtual software agents, what we also
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call Artificial Intelligence or A.I.
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In his 1950 paper, "Computing Machinery and Intelligence". Alan Turing proposed a test
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called 'The Imitation Game', where a human examiner would listen to a conversation between
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another human and a machine. If the examiner can’t tell who is human or machine, the
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machine wins the imitation game. It’s artificially intelligent. That test is now widely known
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as The Turing test.
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A strength of the Turing test is that it’s really simple. It doesn’t matter how we
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define intelligence, the examiner sits there and decides who is human and who is machine.
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It’s still considered a milestone in Artificial Intelligence.
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Though in contrast, the Rorschach test is pretty out of date. A big part of the test
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involves you explaining why you see what you see. And an examiner uses a scoring system
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to tell you what this says about your personality.
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But studies have shown it’s not reliable or valid.
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Really, the Rorschach test is better described as a problem solving task that gives us some
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indication of your past and future behaviours, or at least some of your thoughts.
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And the fact that mechanical brains can have unique thoughts, enough to distinguish responses
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in a task like this, is pretty cool.
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It does set them apart in some way – but is it personality?
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Personality can be defined as “The unique psychological qualities of an individual that
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influence a variety of characteristic behavior patterns across different situations and over time.”
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But how does it apply to robots?
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In his collection of stories I, Robot, Isaac Asimov introduced “Robopsychology” as
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the study of the personalities of intelligent machines.
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It started out as fantasy but Heather Knight, a roboticist from Carnegie Mellon University,
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argues that robots need personality so we can achieve things with machines that neither
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of us could do alone.
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And earlier this year Google patented a method to download and customise personality to a robot.
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But, what does a robot personality look like? In humans our personality traits are our thoughts,
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feelings and behaviours that distinguish us from each other.
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The Five Factor Model of personality suggests your traits are organised in terms of five
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broad factors. Research indicates these traits are present from a young age, come from both
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nature and nurture and can change throughout your life.
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The plasticity principle suggests personality is an open system that can be influenced by
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your environment. Research suggests change is most likely at certain ages or life stages
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(think 20-40 or when you become a parent).
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We tend to think of robot personality like we think about human personality, that everyone’s
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different based on our makeup and experience. After all, those different A.I. saw different
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things in the inkblot test.
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But if one A.I., like Apple’s Siri, has millions of interactions every day, what does
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that mean for its personality?
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Siri, do you have a personality?
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I can’t answer that.
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Let me know what you think in the comments. And see you next week.
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