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posted by Fnord666 on Sunday April 15 2018, @05:55PM   Printer-friendly
from the arguing-semantics dept.

Google's latest AI experiments let you talk to books and test word association skills

Google today announced a pair of new artificial intelligence experiments from its research division that let web users dabble in semantics and natural language processing. For Google, a company that's primary product is a search engine that traffics mostly in text, these advances in AI are integral to its business and to its goals of making software that can understand and parse elements of human language.

The website will now house any interactive AI language tools, and Google is calling the collection Semantic Experiences. The primary sub-field of AI it's showcasing is known as word vectors, a type of natural language understanding that maps "semantically similar phrases to nearby points based on equivalence, similarity or relatedness of ideas and language." It's a way to "enable algorithms to learn about the relationships between words, based on examples of actual language usage," says Ray Kurzweil, notable futurist and director of engineering at Google Research, and product manager Rachel Bernstein in a blog post. Google has published its work on the topic in a paper here, and it's also made a pre-trained module available on its TensorFlow platform for other researchers to experiment with.

The first of the two publicly available experiments released today is called Talk to Books, and it quite literally lets you converse with a machine learning-trained algorithm that surfaces answers to questions with relevant passages from human-written text. As described by Kurzweil and Bernstein, Talk to Books lets you "make a statement or ask a question, and the tool finds sentences in books that respond, with no dependence on keyword matching." The duo add that, "In a sense you are talking to the books, getting responses which can help you determine if you're interested in reading them or not."

The second experiment is Semantris, a game that tests word association skills (while collecting data from users).

The very first thing I thought of to ask "Talk to Books" is "What is a cactus?" The first result is "peyote. A species of small cactus, or the powerful drug decocted therefrom by the Indians of Mexico and the western United States and widely used for medicinal, cere­monial, and religious purposes. G.P.M." Thanks, Google.

Also at TechCrunch.


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  • (Score: -1, Flamebait) by Anonymous Coward on Monday April 16 2018, @12:56AM (1 child)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday April 16 2018, @12:56AM (#667437)

    Google wants you to do what they failed to do: natural language processing. They're hoping that some naïve individual or individuals will have ideas to fix their broken system. As you know, jews are good at nothing except breaking the planet and making money through lending and other illegal and shady practices. AI is none of their business, so they get humans of the planet to do it for them.

    The devil is not creative. What google can't do is create. All they can do is destroy human creation and copy it. With their AI projects and all other projects, including robotics (military executioner robots), all work is done by humans, who in order to pay their (artificially high) rent have to do these slave jobs.

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  • (Score: 2) by realDonaldTrump on Monday April 16 2018, @03:33AM

    by realDonaldTrump (6614) on Monday April 16 2018, @03:33AM (#667486) Homepage Journal

    Boston Dynamics, lots of smart guys there. Ethanol-fueled. And they make some terrific robots. For our Navy, for our Marine Core, for our Army. So many parts of our great military. But it's not Google anymore, they sold it to the Japs last year!