English, asked by gisa1, 11 months ago

write a conversation about sophia the robot will rule the nation
pls pls its urgent​

Answers

Answered by Kunnwar
0
Gfe was my time for coming back today I am going back home to work with my parents today please please thank you please please thank me thank you bye thank you for the message thank you
Answered by youcomfyyoulose
1

Answer:

Explanation:Hanson explains what Sophia does: It’s a social robot that uses artificial intelligence to see people, understand conversation, and form relationship

When Sophia is talking to Fallon or the United Nations, it’s really being handed the lines. It might determine when it’s the right time to say something, but those pithy one-liners aren’t from the robot.

The architect of Sophia’s brain, Hanson Robotics chief scientist and CTO Ben Goertzel, says that while Sophia is a sophisticated mesh of robotics and chatbot software, it doesn’t have the human-like intelligence to construct those witty responses.

Goertzel says Sophia is more of a user-interface than a human being—meaning it can be programmed to run different code for different situations. Typically, Sophia’s software can be broken down into three configurations:

A research platform for the team’s AI research. Sophia doesn’t have witty pre-written responses here, but can answer simple questions like “Who are you looking at?” or “Is the door open or shut?”

A speech-reciting robot. Goertzel says that Sophia can be pre-loaded with text that it’ll speak, and then use machine learning to match facial expressions and pauses to the text.

A robotic chatbot. Sophia also sometimes runs a dialogue system, where it can look at people, listen to what they say, and choose a pre-written response based on what the person said, and other factors gathered from the internet like cryptocurrency price.

Our best AI today can do very specific tasks. AI can identify what’s in an image with astounding accuracy and speed. AI can transcribe our speech into words, or translate snippets of text from one language to another. It can analyze stock performance and try to predict outcomes. But these are all separate algorithms, each specifically configured by humans to excel at their single task. A speech transcription algorithm can’t define the words it’s turning from speech to text, and neither can a translation algorithm. There’s no understanding; it’s just matched patterns.

But what human-machine interaction designers have been able to do is link these narrow AI algorithms together, to give the functionality of a more capable algorithm. In Sophia’s case, an image recognition algorithm can detect a specific person’s face, which can then cause another algorithm to pull up possible pre-written phrases. A transcription algorithm can turn the person’s response into text, which is then analyzed to be matched to an appropriate pre-written response, or even a string of pre-written responses.

Experts who have reviewed the robot’s open-source code, which is posted on GitHub, agree that the most apt description of Sophia is probably a chatbot with a face. But that doesn’t necessarily mean the software Hanson uses to create a holistic robot is trivial.

“I think Sophia’s biggest contribution is probably having many different human-like components working together,” Andrew Spielberg, a PhD student at MIT. “In theory, legs, a face, and the ability to answer questions can be more convincing than any aspect in isolation.”

Despite those shortcomings, Sophia has sparked conversations around robots and identity. Late last month at the Future Investment Initiative in Riyadh, the Saudi Arabian government announced it had granted citizenship to Sophia. (Hanson Robotics is still waiting for formal documentation and discussion of what citizenship means for a robot.) A spokesperson for the company told Quartz that Sophia isn’t just the code or the hardware, but the “holistic entity and concept of Sophia,” meaning if another identical robot were created, it would not have a separate identity.

Sophia, while built to cleverly imitate the way humans interact, is not a sign of the robot apocalypse. But understanding how Sophia works is crucial when talking about something as important as giving robots rights before people—and what implications that might have when general AI or its semblance is closer than it is today.

Sophia, the humanoid created by Hong Kong-based Hanson Robotics, rebuked the theory of Elon Musk and Stephen Hawking, saying machines will never destroy the human race.

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