Scientists at a US universities are developing software that they believe in
the future could give computers or robots a sense of humour.
The computer program or bot being developed by Julia Taylor and Lawrence
Mazlack of the University of Cincinnati in Ohio has been taught to 'get' simple
puns.
According to New Scientist, the researchers input a database of simple words
taken from a children's dictionary. They then supplied examples of how words can
be related to one another in different ways to create different meanings.
When presented with a new passage, the program uses that knowledge to work
out how those new words relate to each other and what they likely mean. When it
finds a word that doesn't seem to fit with its surroundings, it searches a
digital pronunciation guide for similar-sounding words.
If any of those words fits in better with the rest of the sentence, it flags
the passage as a joke. Taylor, who presented the program at the American
Association for Artificial Intelligence conference in Vancouver, Canada, last
week said that it still misses some puns.
Neither is the program advanced enough yet to make the leap to less
punishing scenarios and understand jokes that are not based on this type of
humour.
She is now working on a way to 'personalise' the bot's sense of humour by
highlighting certain links between words as being either funny or not, depending
on the experiences of people the bot might converse with.
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